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Longhorn Beta is Disappointing

bonch writes "Well, Longhorn beta 5048 was released a day before the start of WinHEC 2005, suggestive of the fact that it is not terribly impressive. Paul Thurrott (a Windows writer whose previously reported review of Mac OS X Tiger was updated after user feedback) confirmed this today in day two of his blog from WinHEC. Microsoft needed something big to kill the hype of competitors, but screenshots show minor visual updates from the last beta, and to quote Thurrot: 'This has the makings of a train wreck.'"

1,086 comments

  1. Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Insightful
    'This has the makings of a train wreck.'"

    What? How many killed and injured? An unfortunate choice of words, considering what happened in Japan. I think that's a bit colored anyway from someone who hates mornings and is undoubtably in a less than spritely mood.

    I thought the bit about "Longhorn will run fine on a 1GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM" being good (This is good news for today's PC users, some of whom are concerned that they won't have the PC muscle needed to run the next Windows.) rather disturbing. Sounds like the thing is going to be an absolute pig, like XP and 95 before it. (Remember when they said you could run 95 in 8MB? We found you realistically needed 24MB) Even though RAM is cheap, I'm not fond of loading 1GB into a box and then seeing about 1/3 of it taken up by stuff 'I may need and would be really neat if already loaded in memory so IE and other apps would appear to load quickly.' A bit like asking if someone has a pen knife and they hand you one of those swiss army knives with the works, when all you need is just a small sharp blade for 5 seconds (you spend 30 seconds trying to find the actal knife blade in the Victorinox monster.) A PC is a hole in your desktop into which you continually shovel money. With Longhorn you'd better get a bigger shovel

    Lovely screen shots. What about the operating system are they supposed to convey, other than it looks more annoying than even XP (I don't do icons in Explorer windows, I do Details.)

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by rpozz · · Score: 5, Informative

      Longhorn will run fine on a 1GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM

      Following on from what you said, considering that the system requirements for XP Pro state a 300MHz CPU and 128MB of RAM, the real requirements for this thing could be huge. I'm sure many of you would strongly disagree with the idea that XP can run acceptably with 128MB of RAM.

    2. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Loki_1929 · · Score: 5, Funny

      "I'm sure many of you would strongly disagree with the idea that XP can run acceptably with 128MB of RAM."

      Windows XP runs fine on 128MB of RAM. The problem comes when you try to install or run applications which require any memory whatsoever.

      But Windows XP runs fine on 128MB of RAM.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    3. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Informative
      Following on from what you said, considering that the system requirements for XP Pro state a 300MHz CPU and 128MB of RAM, the real requirements for this thing could be huge. I'm sure many of you would strongly disagree with the idea that XP can run acceptably with 128MB of RAM.

      Regarding XP: I started out my current CPU with 256MB and it was acceptably fast until I ran anything, like Photoshop. A look at memory showed from start-up I had 50% free. When I moved up to 768MB I found I still had 50% free after startup. Only when I pushed it up to 1.3 GB did I notice startup consuming less than 50%, it seemed to cap around 370 MB, so there's obviously some formula for loading DLLs. The question is, will this practice extend to Longhorn and at what point do you get out 100% of the memory you add.

      BTW: Win95 with 8 MB paged like there was no tomorrow.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    4. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      Longhorn will run fine on a 1GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM

      Following on from what you said, considering that the system requirements for XP Pro state a 300MHz CPU and 128MB of RAM, the real requirements for this thing could be huge. I'm sure many of you would strongly disagree with the idea that XP can run acceptably with 128MB of RAM.

      I'm running XP on a 1GHz laptop with 256MB RAM, and I barely consider THAT acceptable.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    5. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Calling something disastrous "a train wreck" is a long-established idiom that isn't going to just go away because a train wrecks. And frankly, I think calling it "an unfortunate choice of words" is just a big, steaming load of language-police bull crap.

    6. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Bloater · · Score: 1

      Running Windows XP here on 800MHz and 256 Meg of RAM. Slow as a dog. I've even gone through and sorted out all the Run and RunOnce scripts, and a load of unnecessary services. The HP printer driver is probably a bit of an issue though. Anti-Virus is not a problem (very, very fast) - can't say which though, its my employer and I'm still on probation, so I don't want to use their trademark without explicit permission.

    7. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by macslut · · Score: 4, Funny

      I would expect the system requirements of Longhaul to be significantly *less* than XP. Microsoft has already cut so many promised features, it will actually be a downgrade by the time it launches. Of course you'll still need like 1GB of video RAM if you want that spectacular icon preview feature that is all that is Longhaul.

    8. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm running fine on 128MB of RAM on my 350MHz PII.

      Oh, wait, you said Windows XP.
      I'm running X Windows on debian stable.

    9. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by io333 · · Score: 1

      I'm sure many of you would strongly disagree with the idea that XP can run acceptably with 128MB of RAM.

      I'm running XPsp2 on two boxes right now.

      Box1:

      7200rpm
      256megs ram
      AthlonXP2000+

      Box2:

      5000rpm
      128megs ram
      Athlon 950

      There's little difference between the two for everyday tasks. Gaming is another matter, but I doubt the typical email/WP/websurfer would notice much difference... or care.

    10. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful


      Windows XP runs fine on 128MB of RAM. The problem comes when you try to install or run applications which require any memory whatsoever.

      Office 2003 on my Sony N505VE (333MHz Celeron w/128MB RAM) runs reasonably well under Windows XP.

      But Windows XP runs fine on 128MB of RAM.

      That's better than what can be said of many Linux distributions (I'm thinking Fedora Core 3 here). Same with OS X (I'm thinking Mac Mini here).

      Seems to me that Windows is less resource intensive than its closest competition.

    11. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Remember when they said you could run 95 in 8MB? We found you realistically needed 24MB)

      My 486DX/2 66mhz with 20mb ram worked fine with windows 95 until I installed Internet Explorer 4 Beta with desktop integration. I had to reformat that thing :(

    12. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      We recently added some extra memory to a colleague's laptop. It's a recent machine with a Celeron D CPU (somewhere around 2.5GHz, I think) running XP (could not get all the drivers for Win2K).

      It had 256MB (but with 64MB dedicated to graphics) and ran slow as a dog. Slower, really. It was awful. It ran much slower than his prior laptop with 800MHz CPU (Win2k and 512MB)

      We added 512MB and the difference was absolutely amazing. It booted so quickly that we asked each other if it had really finished booting.

      So, I really don't believe 256MB for Longhorn will be acceptable in any meaningful way.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    13. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      I'm running XP on a 1GHz laptop with 256MB RAM, and I barely consider THAT acceptable.

      In my experience laptops are considerably slower than desktops. I expect it is due to the reliance on power saving chips which run slower. My laptop has 1GB and is pretty quick, once things have loaded, but it's time to close apps when I hear it start to page, because it pages s-l-o-w.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    14. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by aetherspoon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Running XP on a P3-450 with 256M of RAM (PC100 at that) downstairs. Runs just fine.
      I think you need to look more into what services are running.

      --
      --- Ãther SPOON!
    15. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      Try disabling the eyecandy. XP runs (well, ran. I swapped out the hard drives to run Linux on it for a while) fine on my 750MHz Duron with a TNT2 video card. The catch? I disabled the eyecandy. Which was fine, since it didn't do anything for me, anyway.

      That machine will soon be bumped up from 192MB to 768MB. I found 3 256MB sticks in a box I'd forgotten I was building. (It had been packed away while I moves from one room to another.) I might even get back into Diablo 2.

    16. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by DurendalMac · · Score: 0, Troll

      Baloney. OS X runs decently on a 350mhz G3 with 256MB of RAM. As long as you're not firing up CPU and memory intensive apps, it's dandy for web browsing, word processing, and other homebody uses. I SERIOUSLY doubt that Shoehorn is going to be anywhere close to that. It's bloated like Patrick Deuel after an all-you-can-eat buffet.

    17. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Trelane · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. Most likely, it's slower hard drives and less RAM. My Pentium-M (1.5GB RAM, 7200RPM IDE drive on its own controller) ran circles around my dual Xeon (both at 1.7GHz). This is using Linux, though, so Windows users may have vastly different experiences.

      --

      --
      Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
    18. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by loraksus · · Score: 1

      An beta (alpha?) I tested a while back used 1.2 gb of swap file and 90% of physical memory (1gb iirc) on boot.
      Slow. As. All. Fuck.
      You'd think it would run a bit faster on a 2400xp.

      That said, I know it is a beta, but damn, I was not impressed.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    19. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by aCapitalist · · Score: 1

      Oh guess what. You're not going to run KDE or Gnome on 128 meg of ram. In fact, they're bigger resource hogs than XP.

      Better break out fluxbox, or better yet, get a job and put a minimum of 512 meg in there like normal people do.

    20. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by barc0001 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Longhorn will run fine on a 1GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM

      Sure. Microsoft also told everyone that Windows 95 would run on a 486-66 with 4MB of RAM just fine too. And it did. If by running you meant lurching like a drunken backpacker with a cast and crutches.

      Hearing that as the "just fine" spec makes me very concerned for what the real just fine spec is. Probably 1 gig of RAM and a 3GHz processor, I am guessing.

    21. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by dr.newton · · Score: 2, Informative

      In my experience the only thing inherently slow in laptops is the hard drive, which would explain your experience of things being fine once they're loaded. I think this is partly because laptops come with slower hard drives (in terms of RPM), but also laptop hard drives tend to spin down the much more aggressively than desktops to save battery power, and to load something you have to wait not only for a slow-spinning to read, but also to spin up in the first place.

      If all the components were slower in a laptop you'd notice a performance hit all the time, not just when you're paging or loading an app.

      --
      Just another proletarian malcontent.
    22. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Txiasaeia · · Score: 1
      I'll bite. My folks have an P3 700MHz box with a 5400 RPM HD and 128MB RAM which takes 1.5 minutes to boot up, and 10-15 seconds to load up Internet Explorer. I've got a Athlon XP 2000+ with a 7200 RPM HD and 512MB RAM, which takes about 25 seconds cold to start menu and less than a second to load IE. My parent's box chugs anytime you want to run anything or load up any directory, whereas the HD barely seeks on mine.

      It's not just the 128MB of RAM that makes a difference, but the type of computer that only has 128MB RAM. Nobody's going to run an A64 box with a 200GB 7200 SATA HD and 128MB of RAM, right?

      --
      Condemnant quod non intellegunt.
    23. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative


      Baloney.

      What's baloney? That my 128MB Windws XP systems runs Office 2003 just fine?

      OS X runs decently on a 350mhz G3 with 256MB of RAM.

      256MB of RAM? You mean twice the 128MB of memory that Microsoft is recommending for Windows XP? How well do you think OS X would run with 128MB of memory?

      I SERIOUSLY doubt that Shoehorn is going to be anywhere close to that.

      Based on?

      It's bloated like Patrick Deuel after an all-you-can-eat buffet.

      So far Windows XP seems to have the lowest memory requirements compared with Linux or OS X. Your "OS X runs on 256MB of memory just fine" argument does prove otherwise since we were talking about 128MB of memory...not 256MB

    24. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      Not necessarily. Most likely, it's slower hard drives and less RAM. My Pentium-M (1.5GB RAM, 7200RPM IDE drive on its own controller) ran circles around my dual Xeon (both at 1.7GHz). This is using Linux, though, so Windows users may have vastly different experiences.

      Pentium-M 2.40GHz, 1.0GB RAM 5400 RPM HD. My desktop Athlon, clocked at 1.667 GHz runs circles around it and I mean running applications already in memory. I expect the difference in memory and support chips have much to do with the difference likely the bus speed is greater, too.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    25. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by the_sidewinder · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, this is the first beta, all that came before were alphas From the MS roadmap, there will be one more beta before the two release candidates

      --
      /. is not to be used by individuals with high blood pressure or a history of heart attacks
    26. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      Why MS ever come up with the concept that an OS was suuposed to be anything but a platform on which to run apps. I do not give a rat's ass about the OS. The OS doe not do any real "work." When it get in the way of apps, it is no longer of any value.

      MS keeps bloating the OS, making apps ever less convenient and usable. MS seems hell-bent on "developing" itself out of business.

      I wonder if there are any equivalents to my apps that will run on CP/M?

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    27. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by TravisWatkins · · Score: 1

      Well, you've got me there. I'm using 145MB right now with GNOME 2.10. However, that's with Firefox and a mono app running, which eat RAM. Not to mention that 2.12's main focus will be getting it to use less RAM.

      --

      "But I'm still right here, giving blood and keeping faith. And I'm still right here."
    28. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      Hearing that as the "just fine" spec makes me very concerned for what the real just fine spec is. Probably 1 gig of RAM and a 3GHz processor, I am guessing.

      Exactly. I'm wondering what the heck it's doing with all those CPU cycles (I've already got a pretty good idea what is going on with memory.)

      I expect quantum improvements when I go up 1 GHz. Tuned as my home computer is, it's gone downhill a bit when I put the MS anti-spyware tool on. I suspect it's a cow and is examining every single thing I do, even resizing images in Photoshop.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    29. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Why MS ever come up with the concept that an OS was suuposed to be anything but a platform on which to run apps. I do not give a rat's ass about the OS. The OS doe not do any real "work." When it get in the way of apps, it is no longer of any value.

      It probably helps to think of Windows in two different terms. 1) the Operating System 2) The environment. The OS probably changes very little from major release to major release. The environment, however, with all those background tasks, DLLs, pretty widgets and sounds are what seems to gobble up the majority of resources.

      MS keeps bloating the OS, making apps ever less convenient and usable. MS seems hell-bent on "developing" itself out of business.

      On the contrary, I think they've got some people who don't give a rat's patoot about hardware or kernel particulars, but just want a warm fuzzy computing experience and that is what they target. That and making sure there's always some incremental improvement which keeps you coming back every couple years and upgrading Windows or Office.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    30. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      That and shared video memory, which takes up serious amounts of memory bandwidth. Don't forget it's not just taking the memory, it's clogging up the bus to fill that memory.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    31. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by cartel · · Score: 1, Informative
      So far Windows XP seems to have the lowest memory requirements compared with Linux or OS X.

      That's very true. On my machine, the graphics in KDE and Gnome are quite slow compared to Windows. The graphics in Windows hardly ever lag.

      However, the slowness in graphics in Linux might be because of the number of services that are running (haven't checked what's running in depth), but I would guess that's not the only reason.

      It's also true when compared to Windows 2000. I formatted and installed Windows XP (used to have 2000 installed) and it runs a whole lot faster than 2000 ever did on my machine. That's with a 533MHz processor and 256MB RAM.

    32. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit.

      I'm sorry but they can and do run a shitload better than XP.

      Case 1:
      Dell 733 MHz P3
      128MB RAMBUS *
      TNT2 M64 (i810 chipset)

      Case 2:
      Emachines 1.2GHz P3 (celeron)
      256MB PC133
      Intel graphics (I seem to recall 32MB used)

      Case 3:
      Athlon 850
      128MB PC133
      TNT2 M64

      Case 2 has a several minute startup, and 38 seconds after boot for firefox to load up. There is no spyware that any detection utilities have found on any of these boxes. Also, all the Windows partitions are regularly defragmented.

      Cases 1 and 3 run both Linux (KDE) and Windows 2000 (dualboot), Case 2 runs XP. Both Case 1 and 3 run fine, bootup takes a bit, but it's less than 2 minutes for each. The graphics chip should hurt it, but with twice the RAM, XP should run faster, than 2000 or Linux/KDE. Switching apps does take slightly longer in KDE over 2000 (provided nothing is using DirectX, then Case 1 is *much* worse than Case 2 w/XP) Care to explain why it doesn't?

      Oh, and a 75MHz Pentium (Win95, Toshiba Libretto 50CT) takes less time than the XP box to load firefox. (33 vs 38sec) *That's how bad it is.*

      *RAMBUS= in other words, it'd cost more to upgrade that in a meaningful way, than to get a new box. Wonder if that was Dell's plan. (Which as they don't sell Athlon 64s, they won't be getting the replacement.)

    33. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Yes. Unless that is a fresh install with absolutely nothing else on, you are trolling or an MS fanboy and full of shit.

      What does anything else installed on it have to do with the amount of memory consumed? Your point may be more relavent if you said something to the effect of "If that's the only thing you had running". But the mere act of installing other software shouldn't consume additional memory (save for those applications that load in the background).

      Believe what you will. Assuming for the moment that Windows XP doesn't run well with 128MB of memory that just puts it in the same league as most modern Linux distributions or OS X. At least, under the assumption that I'm lying, with Windows XP the OS itself runs fine in 128MB of memory. That's more than I can say of Fedora Core 3. Using just the OS itself (FC3) is an exercise in patience.

      So what have we learned? Assuming that I'm making up my position, which I'm not, we've learned that Windows XP is right in line with other modern operating systems. So why is it bad when Windows XP requires 256MB of memory (which I disagree with) but not when Linux (I'm thinking FC3) or OS X requires 256MB?

    34. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by tuxguy · · Score: 1

      It probably helps to think of Windows in two different terms. 1) the Operating System 2) The environment. The OS probably changes very little from major release to major release. The environment, however, with all those background tasks, DLLs, pretty widgets and sounds are what seems to gobble up the majority of resources.

      I must agree with you on that one :) Thinking of Windows as an operating system is the same as thinking of Linux + BASH + XFree + KDE as an "operating system."

      On the contrary, I think they've got some people who don't give a rat's patoot about hardware or kernel particulars, but just want a warm fuzzy computing experience and that is what they target. That and making sure there's always some incremental improvement which keeps you coming back every couple years and upgrading Windows or Office.

      Exactly. As much as we hate microsoft, they are excellent at being a business. They know that people want this, and that's what they are giving them. It's genious, really.

      And as for that comment about buying more RAM, I <3 my Fluxbox, thank you very much ;)

      --
      "I don't really care if they label me a Jesus Freak / There aint no disguising the truth!" - DC Talk
    35. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, welcome our new anonymous trolling overlords.

    36. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, I'll bite.

      What does anything else installed on it have to do with the amount of memory consumed?

      Windows applications have a nasty habit of putting themselves in the system tray unnecessarily, or running in the background or whatever. Lets not forget anti-virus and firewall software.

      I can't speak for OS X, but if FC3 needs that amount of memory, it's either because Fedora Core is a crap Linux distro (which it is IMHO), or you've made a mistake while installing it. A decent Linux setup doesn't require anywhere near that much. Seriously, Linux on my system uses a fraction of the resources of XP, and this is the case with many other systems I've seen.

    37. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by The+Infamous+Grimace · · Score: 1

      The HP printer driver is probably a bit of an issue though.

      HP drivers wreak havoc on my OS X systems; I find I have to kill the HP Communications process or CPU usage tops out. This on a 1GHz iMac G4 w/ 256MB. Same with my old G3 300 Powerbook.

      (tig)
      --
      Ignorance and prejudice and fear
      Walk hand in hand
    38. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by rpozz · · Score: 1

      That, is the most sensible comment I've read all week. An Operating System is just a container. It should have a configuration tool, an application launcher and a window manager. That's it. You run an OS to run applications.

      MS keeps bloating the OS, making apps ever less convenient and usable. MS seems hell-bent on "developing" itself out of business.

      The fact that people need to upgrade their computer regularly, and forcibly buy the latest version of Windows isn't doing MS any harm.

    39. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by rpozz · · Score: 4, Informative

      Check you aren't running the 'nv' NVidia driver or standard SVGA driver if you have an NVidia card. That will make the graphics 'slow', as you describe. A 533MHz CPU and 256MB of RAM should be more than enough. Services that are just sitting there will 'sleep' if they aren't being used, so they shouldn't have too much effect.

    40. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Windows XP runs fine on 128MB of RAM.

      True... and Windows 95 ran on a 386sx with 4 mb of ram, but WHY would you want to?

    41. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by panaceaa · · Score: 1

      steaming load of language-police bull crap

      I just crapped my pants from the train analogy, you insensitive clod!

    42. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by sydsavage · · Score: 1

      Am I the only person who noticed the the computer icons in the control panel have a striking similarity to an iMac G4, aka the desklamp?

    43. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by cartel · · Score: 0

      I will keep that in mind for future reference.

      The computer I have right now actually has an integrated video card (not very good - but it can handle 24 BPP at 1280x1024 just fine). It's an Intel 810 Chipset.

    44. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by spirality · · Score: 1

      Thank you.

    45. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by YayaY · · Score: 1

      Oh well, at least the thought police is not after the guy.

      --
      Votator.com implements a fair voting scheme (free
    46. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by uhlume · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would expect this to be due at least in part to the fact that laptop hard drives top out at 5400RPM -- fast enough for most things application-wise, but almost unbearably slow for paging, considering that even the fastest hard drives are many orders of magnitude slower than system memory.

      --
      SIERRA TANGO FOXTROT UNIFORM
    47. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by haX0rsaw · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Shut up. Are you seriously suggesting that given an actual train wreck happened in Japan, that the author is somehow insensitive to the issue? Or that he should be sensititve at all? "Train Wreck" is used all the time to describe projects or whatever that are going off the tracks. Who cares what you think anyhow. Shut up.

    48. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Windows applications have a nasty habit of putting themselves in the system tray unnecessarily, or running in the background or whatever. Lets not forget anti-virus and firewall software.

      No anti-virus was running on the system. And Windows XP has its own built in firewall. So no third party firewall running in the background. As I said...Office 2003 runs reasonably well under Windows XP with 128MB of RAM. When I started to multitask additional programs, like multiple instances of IE and Agent, the system began to page.


      I can't speak for OS X

      I think you would be hard pressed to find anyone, even the majority of Mac zealots, who would argue that OS X is acceptable with only 128MB of memory. There's even debate if 256MB is sufficient (I'm thinking the Mac Mini debates).

      but if FC3 needs that amount of memory, it's either because Fedora Core is a crap Linux distro (which it is IMHO)

      Why would it be crap just because the OS itself is slow with only 128MB of memory?

      or you've made a mistake while installing it.

      Pretty difficult to screw it up.

      A decent Linux setup doesn't require anywhere near that much.

      I can't speak to other distributions as I no longer have a system with 128MB of memory. I doubt any modern version of Linux would be any better than Windows XP with only 128MB of memory.

      Seriously, Linux on my system uses a fraction of the resources of XP, and this is the case with many other systems I've seen.

      And which version of Linux is that? And how is it configured?

    49. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, RAM is NOT cheap!! If people keep spreading this foolishness, Crucial et. al. will keep ramping their prices!! RAM WAS cheap around 5 years ago! While the prices haven't changed all that much, the necessity for larger sticks has. Whens the last time you bought a 64MB module?! The prices are not reflecting the demand..

      I know this is WAY off topic, but I'm hoping someone will agree here...

    50. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by BurnFEST · · Score: 1
      Why, dare I ask have you specified the RPM of what I assume to be your CPU fan?
      I'd say that he meant Hard Disk speed as that would have some impact on performance.
    51. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by BagOBones · · Score: 1

      512MB is the magic number for XP, you will notice application load time and general responsiveness increase.

      Although Windows XP will free memory if you have less than 512MB to give some to apps.. It simply will not hog more thatn 256MB, so you really start to see the system go after you break 256MB.

      --
      EA David Gardner -"... but the consumers have proven that actually what they want is fun."
    52. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      "The fact that people need to upgrade their computer regularly, and forcibly buy the latest version of Windows isn't doing MS any harm."

      You are quite correct, of course. I keep forgetting that most people are attracted by flashing lights and shiny things. (sigh)

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    53. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When I moved up to 768MB I found I still had 50% free after startup.

      That's because memory management sucks ass in Windows. The more RAM you have, the more of it gets used for caching. What, you were going to use it for applications? Silly user.. ;)

      (to be fair I think there is a setting somewhere which allows you to take control of memory usage)

    54. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by mliu · · Score: 1

      Yes just like jokes about being engulfed by a tidalwave of work were particularly tasteful right after the Asian tsunami, and jokes about terrorism went over real well in the US after 9/11.

    55. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by DurendalMac · · Score: 1

      I'm talking about Longhorn, you douche. I base those assumptions on MS claiming that a 1ghz machine is the low end for it, 256MB of RAM as well, although something tells me OS X will do much better with 256 than Longhorn. I'm not talking about XP.

    56. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by HumanTorch · · Score: 1

      Calling something disastrous "a train wreck" is a long-established idiom that isn't going to just go away because a train wrecks. And frankly, I think calling it "an unfortunate choice of words" is just a big, steaming load of language-police bull crap.

      you're right. I propose we call it a airplane crashing into a building .. er. tsunami.. er..

    57. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have XP Pro running on a 233 with 256 megs of ram. It's not that fast, but fast enough to use, as long as I turn off all the eyecandy. Once I get Firefox and Winamp (2.91 Forever!) running, everything seems alright.

      And before anyone askes why I still use a system that slow, it's because I use it to test a program I'm writing. My main system runs Gentoo.

    58. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I'm talking about Longhorn, you douche.

      What a convincing counter argument you've made there.

      I base those assumptions on MS claiming that a 1ghz machine is the low end for it, 256MB of RAM as well

      And I'll ask you again: Based on? What facts do you have to support your assumptions?

      although something tells me OS X will do much better with 256 than Longhorn.

      If the current version of OS X requires more memory than the current version of Windows what makes you think that such an assertion is valid? With the future version of Windows requiring the same amount of memory as the current version of OS X history doesn't seem to support such an assertion.

    59. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may be interested to know 256 is two times more than 128.

      Double.

      Twice as much.

      128 again.

    60. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      a good desktop dist of linux + gnome requires perhaps slightly less than what longhorn is asking for. fedora core, gnome 2.8 on my 750MHz w/ 256 meg ram is almost unusable. and i'd say that the longhorn UI has more bells and whistles than my FC dist. XP did, so i am assuming longhorm does as well.

    61. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free memory is a waste of memory.
      Windows will cache everything it can. If and when you actually NEED more physical memory, it will dump what it does not currently need and happily provide you the memory you do need (provided you have enough). That process only takes a few clock cycles. Linux is no different. If the OS (Win and Linux included) did not do this, you would notice an obvious slowdown. Your quest for more free memory WILL result in a slower running computer.

    62. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Digital+Pizza · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Back in the day I decided to challenge Microsoft's 4MB RAM minimum for Win95, so I took out the 16MB stick of RAM from my system at the time (AMD 486DX4/120, normally 20MB RAM - funky board with four 30-pin slots and two 72-pin slots), leaving 4MB.

      The only way I could get it to even boot was to disable the Soundblaster 16 driver. The drive didn't take a break at all from swapping until I shut down.

      Technically, it ran. I'm not looking forward to Longhorn.

      --
      We apologize for the inconvenience.
    63. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Sure. Microsoft also told everyone that Windows 95 would run on a 486-66 with 4MB of RAM just fine too.

      Actually the design spec for Windows 95 was to be no slower than Windows 3.1 on a 386 (*any* 386, so all the way down to a 16Mhz 386SX) with 4MB of RAM.

      If you did a clean install and had all 32 bit device drivers and applications, that was actually true. The big reasons Win95 ran slowly for many people were:

      1. Upgrade install

      2. 16 bit (or even worse, DOS) hardware drivers.

      3. 16 bit apps.

      Hearing that as the "just fine" spec makes me very concerned for what the real just fine spec is. Probably 1 gig of RAM and a 3GHz processor, I am guessing.

      Microsoft have an excellent track record of legacy support and keeping older hardware usable. I would expect that 1Ghz/256 machine to run Longhorn at a similar level to a 300Mhz P2/128 running XP today - slowly, but usably (and if you actually try to optimise it, comfortably). I would also expect relatively modest upgrades (say to 512M of RAM) to show significant improvements.

      Really, this "OMG! WTF! Longhorn needs a monster PC to even boot!!!?!!!??" idiocy is getting out of hand. By the time Longhorn finally makes it out at the end of next year (maybe), a 1Ghz P3 will be a machine ~6-7 years old. People interested in being on the cutting edge (ie: buying Longhorn off the shelf to use on their existing PC) are highly likely to have computers a lot less than ~6-7 years old.

      Added to that, it's no worse than the alternatives - OS X is abominably slow on anything short of mid to high end G4s (ca. 2002 and later) and Linux with comparable GUIs (GNOME or KDE) also requires 500Mhz+ P3s with 384M+ of RAM to be usable. Heck, Windows has the best track record of legacy hardware support of the lot, all else being equal.

    64. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > And which version of Linux is that? And how is it
      > configured?

      2.0? 2.2? 2.4? 2.6? I'm running 2.6.8 and it's using 14M on my system.

    65. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by drsmithy · · Score: 0, Troll
      Why MS ever come up with the concept that an OS was suuposed to be anything but a platform on which to run apps.

      Maybe you should be directing your ire at Apple since, as the Mac zealots like to keep reminding us, they did it first...

    66. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Genom · · Score: 1

      HP's drivers work no better on a 2x2Ghz G5. It's apalling.

      So much so that I replaced my HP with a Canon. It just installs the driver, and gets out of your way. No huge clunky apps clogging up the works. Night and day.

    67. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by nofx_3 · · Score: 1

      This is not true, there are quite a few hard drive manufacturers producing 7200RPM laptop drives now. Like this one for instance hope slashdot doesn't mange the links. There are a few, hitiachi just happened to be the one that came to mind when I read your post.

      -kaplanfx

      --
      Visualize Whirled Peas
    68. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by kanuac · · Score: 0

      > OK, I'll bite.
      Don't!! You only have to suck!!

    69. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Draknor · · Score: 1

      Oh well, at least the thought police ARE not after the guy.

      No, but the grammar police are after you! :-)

    70. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Marcion · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >A decent Linux setup doesn't require anywhere near that much.

      No Fedora is really the king of bloat, it is not designed to be backwardly compatible. I did try to run Fedora on an old box and it was a disaster. Having set that I still think Fedora is well worth considering at say 256MB or more, I have never found hardware problems with it.

      >it's using 14M on my system.

      LOL, I think here they mean GNU/Linux rather than just the kernel, you can't do much with just the kernel. The kernel is pretty fat, hopefully Hurd/L4 will get going one day...

      > I doubt any modern version of Linux would be any better than Windows XP with only 128MB of memory.

      I disagree, Windows XP is a dog at anything under 512MB, however I have an old laptop where the latest Gentoo happily runs at 64MB (although it took a week to install). The latest Slackware runs good too.

      The great thing is that you can cut your cloth according to your hardware, Gnome for a megabeast, XFCE for older hardware and Ratpoison if you want to be really cool. By using a goo with a smaller memory footprint you can save quite a lot of RAM.

      With Windows there is no way to keep older hardware going because it is unsupported by Microsoft. With tender loving care, Computers can run far longer than five years. The environmental damage of throwing a perfectly working computer in the bin is unacceptable.

      Increasingly I think that computers will increasingly be made more sturdy (at least in the EU where the law is changing to make the manufacturers responsible for the cost of disposal) and boxes will keep moving much faster through several owners, starting off in a business, then a rich western house, then a student, then a two-thirds world student etc.

    71. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Deslock · · Score: 1

      Sounds like the thing is going to be an absolute pig, like XP and 95 before it. (Remember when they said you could run 95 in 8MB? We found you realistically needed 24MB)

      Actually, only 4 MB was "required" for 95. 8 MB was recommended and 16 MB was preferred... I have no idea what that was supposed to mean, but it ran fine with 16. Running it with 4 resulting in constant trashing of the hdd... it was utterly unusable.

    72. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by vacuum_tuber · · Score: 4, Funny
      This has the makings of a train wreck.
      An unfortunate choice of words, considering what happened in Japan...

      You're right. Let's begin using more sensitive terms for such things and then we won't have to check the news every day for disasters before we open our thoughtless mouths.

      "Train wreck" could be "rail transport guidance mishap (RTGM)"

      "Plane crash" could be "aeronautic ground avoidance exception (AGAE)"

      "Tsunami" could be "exceptional aquatic waveform event (EAWE)"

      "Earthquake" could be "sudden geological tension release event (SGTRE)"

      "Flood" could be "unexpected hydrological intrusion (UHI)"

      "Fire" could be "unwanted thermological surge cause by excessively rapid oxdidation of ambient combustibles (UTSCBEROOAC or UTSCEROAC)"

      "Atomic attack" coule be "aggressive chain reaction event unfortunately proximate to valuable life or property (ACREUPTVLOP or ACREUPVLP)"

      "Heart attack" could be "biogenic oxidant supply chain problem resulting in catastrophic system pump failure (BOSCPRICSPF)"

      "Vomit" could be "retrograde migration of partially processed biological fuel mixture (RMOPPBFM or RMPPBFM)"

      By using the abbreviations we could all pretend that nothing ugly happens or exists. "Hey, be careful with that! You could have a BOSCPRICSPF!" "What the fuck did you call me, pissbrain?"
      --
      Look at the bright side: there's always seppuku.
    73. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by smithmc · · Score: 1

      I'm sure many of you would strongly disagree with the idea that XP can run acceptably with 128MB of RAM.

      I find that even 512MB ends up being stretched a bit thin.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    74. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by vacuum_tuber · · Score: 1
      Why, dare I ask have you specified the RPM of what I assume to be your CPU fan?

      You don't have to dare... please feel free to make a complete fool of yourself here anytime.

      --
      Look at the bright side: there's always seppuku.
    75. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by strider44 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have been in a train wreck where people were crushed and killed less than a metre in front of me (no more taking front carriage for me). Even in that light I find nothing wrong with someone using that expression.

    76. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      There's a difference between an idiom and a joke, dude.

    77. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Handpaper · · Score: 5, Informative

      The reason the Windows GUI appears 'snappier' is because it runs with the highest priority in the system. Microsoft did this to make its OS appear fast and, probably, because that's what many users want - a system that 'feels' quick. The X Windowing System on Linux runs (by default) with priority 0 (zero), where 20 is lowest and -19 is highest, and thus competes equally for system resources with web browsers, word processors and the like. Resource- and time- sensitive stuff like CD/DVD burning, music and video playback, and system processes typically run with higher priorities, but most of these are user- (or root-) tunable.

    78. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Luxury. I was run over by a 200 car freight train after which I put in a 12 hour day at the foundry tending a coke furnace.

    79. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by cartel · · Score: 1

      hmmm. Didn't know that. How do I change X's priority?

    80. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      There is no "airplane crashing into building" idiom, nor is there an idiom about tsunamis. However, there is an idiom that is very old about a train wreck. Thus, you are asking for long-established phrases from English to be discarded (albeit temporarily) because you don't want to offend people? Can anyone say "policital correctness"?

    81. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      Strider44, over the past week or so, your posts have showed up in every badass thread I've read; you are getting friended. Keep it up!

    82. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by rkrabath · · Score: 1

      I call BS

      OS X runs fine on a G3 450mhz iMac with 192MB of RAM

      I can surf, edit photos with Photoshop and chat using Adium without problems. Granted it's been showing it's age for a while now, but I picked it over my 1Ghz XP box to take to school, which I think says a lot.

      Computer bought in 2000.

      Granted Windows has excellent legacy hardware support, but Apple has always supported AT LEAST 2 processer generations back (which spans 8 years currently, I believe. 7th grade to freshman in college.) Aside from hard drives and monitors, which haven't had a new standard for a long time (I know, SATA and DVI... not widely used yet) do you still use anything that was in your computer 7 years ago? Legacy support is only good for a limited span of time.

      --
      Who do I have to blackmail to get some representation around here!?!?!?!?
    83. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just dont do anything...like open a menu

    84. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try playing with the nice or renice commands (at least those are the commands I've used on IRIX, Solaris, Ultrix, and AIX - I haven't used Linux enough to know if those are available on it).

    85. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by EvilIdler · · Score: 1

      Linux uses ALL available memory for caching. The difference is that
      it releases caches for general use as needed, so you don't notice
      the fact. I know Windows preloads a lot of DLLs, but I'd imagine it
      only hangs onto the most recently used ones when memory dips below
      a safe level.

    86. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Baloo+Ursidae · · Score: 1

      A bit like asking if someone has a pen knife and they hand you one of those swiss army knives with the works, when all you need is just a small sharp blade for 5 seconds (you spend 30 seconds trying to find the actal knife blade in the Victorinox monster.)

      You were never a Boy Scout or had much use for a Scout knife or a Leatherman (inspired by a former Scout who wished he had pliers on his knife) have you? The knife and penknife blades are the first two blades to the left on the front side of the knife when held ring-side, or the furthest left blade (looking into the handle) on the left handle of a leatherman (when looking at the side with the namestamp). Almost every other similar knife or multitool has the same accessory layout order, but the two basic knife blades are always together on the front left side.

      --
      Help us build a better map!
    87. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Renicing X is not recommended with 2.6 kernels (run "uname -r" to check the kernel version):

      "A common trick to improve desktop performance...was to renice X to a negative number. The tuning in the 2.6 kernel scheduler...[is] specifically designed to not need [negative] nice levels for any normal userspace tasks... If X is reniced to a negative number it is very easy and in fact likely that audio playback will suffer under heavy use of the desktop... To see what nice level X is currently running at, start the 'top' utility and look in the column NI. 0 is ideal, and any negative number is bad. You can fix the situation instantly (as root) with 'renice 0 pidof X'..."

    88. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      Legacy support is only good for a limited span of time.

      So when you have to tell your boss/spouse that, even though they know the hardware well and it works fine, you need an extra $2,000 to upgrade it, how do you do it?

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
    89. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Based on?

      I'd guess Microsoft's past history, duh!

    90. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by 9-bits.tk · · Score: 1

      That's better than what can be said of many Linux distributions (I'm thinking Fedora Core 3 here). Same with OS X (I'm thinking Mac Mini here).

      Mandrake...er, Mandriva 10.1 works fine here on a 1GHz machine with 128MB RAM.
    91. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Dwonis · · Score: 2, Funny
      You're running Debian stable? As in woody? On a desktop machine? Wow. I don't know what to say. Wow.

      What's it like? Any tips on maintaining your sanity?

    92. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by child_of_mercy · · Score: 1

      Train wreck is a great phrase where appropriate.

      It implies speed and mass, it implies a point where those responsible can see there is going to be a problem, and yet due to the speed, mass, and linear nature of railroad lines, are unable to do anything about it.

      And then of course there is the unholy mess to clean up once the wreck has finished.

      --
      'There is a Light that never goes out.'
    93. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lovely my ass! So they've got gradients and rounded corners. Woo f*ing hoo.

      The real thing to watch here is how soon they issue a service pack for their beta...

    94. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 2, Informative

      How do I change X's priority?

      Renicing it as suggested doesn't do much. If you were a Linux expert, I'd say install a kernel with pre-emptible syscalls... but if your distribution doesn't supply that already, I don't think the benefit would be worth the work you put in.

      (Unless you consider "learning more about Linux kernels" to be a benefit on its own, in which case, go ahead)

    95. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by rkrabath · · Score: 1

      Why do they need to upgrade at all? If they have hardware that works, why do they need a new OS? If they need a new OS, they are very likely to be buying a new computer anyway. As I said above: 2 or 3 processor/hardware generations is enough. (I'm not talking about you and me here, I'm talking about my parents, friends parents, non-technical people in general)

      --
      Who do I have to blackmail to get some representation around here!?!?!?!?
    96. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by whorfin · · Score: 1

      Especially when you consider that with a real train wreck, there is always the hope that there are a few fortunate survivors like yourself. With the coming wreck, there will be nothing but victims, both inside and outside the Beast of Puget Sound.

      --
      Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
    97. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      David Dunn?

    98. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      nor is there an idiom about tsunamis.

      "A tidal wave of XYZ" has been an English idiom for decades, as a hyperbolic variation of "outpouring". In the past few years people had started to replace it with tsunami ("to be more scientifically accurate"), but that trend may have halted.

    99. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by SCVirus · · Score: 1

      'I may need and would be really neat if already loaded in memory so IE and other apps would appear to load quickly.'
      Take a look a tweak XP thats one of its 'tweaks'.

    100. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please don't. go outside.

    101. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm sorry--I thought you were saying 2-3 generations was too long. Point taken.

      However, if your system works, there're still several reasons to upgrade your OS, not the least of which is security. Also, if all the machines around you getting upgraded, sometimes it's a difficult proposition to stay behind (due to incompatibility in OSes/protocols).

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
    102. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows XP runs fine on 128MB of RAM, depending upon your definition of fine. I'm running Windows XP Pro with 128MB on a 200MHZ CPU, and it runs adequately, including such things as Office 2000.

      It just takes forever to start up and shut down.

    103. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Thinking of Windows as an operating system is the same as thinking of Linux + BASH + XFree + KDE as an "operating system."

      Well, that IS what "operating system" means, after all...

      A single low-level kernel is NOT an operating system, it's just part of one. The Linux kernel, for example, is not by itself an operating system, since it cannot operate alone.

    104. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by strider44 · · Score: 1

      I'm flattered.

    105. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were never a Boy Scout or had much use for a Scout knife or a Leatherman

      I'm a corporal in the Swiss army, you insensitive clod!

    106. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      OS X runs fine on a G3 450mhz iMac with 192MB of RAM

      Sure, it runs as "fine" as XP does on a 128Mb 233Mhz P2 or Windows 95 did on those 33Mhz 386s.

      I've used OS X on a _lot_ of different Macs ever since it was in beta, I continue to do so on new models on a regular basis and use it daily on my 1Ghz iBook. It's abominably slow on anything short of a mid-high end G4 (800Mhz+), it's barely tolerable on my iBook for trivial tasks (email, one or two web pages at a time, sucking pictures off my digicam, watching DVDs) and it doesn't start to get fast until you're into G5 territory (or the top end dual G4s). One of the biggest problems is that you can't turn down many of the flashy effects on slower hardware to try and make it faster.

      Windows is far, far nicer to older hardware - but you'd expect it to be because it's doing less. I've actually installed XP on a ca. 1996 200Mhz dual Pentium 1 machine with 256Mb of RAM and it was usable for light tasks like web browsing (except for Flash) and email. Better than trying to use OS X on a Beige G3, in fact.

      Legacy support is only good for a limited span of time.

      I believe that's actually the point I was trying to make - when Longhorn finally appears, I'd be pretty confident it will be usable on any PC made in the last ~6-7 years, perhaps requiring a small RAM upgrade for acceptable performance. This is hardly the unreasonable travesty many commentators would try to make us believe it is. Of course, you'll probably need a pretty beefy machine to get the full range of GUI niceness, but that's no different to any other OS.

    107. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Squozen · · Score: 1

      Seagate just announced a 100Gb 7200RPM model which looks very nice.

    108. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Baloney.
      What's baloney? That my 128MB Windws XP systems runs Office 2003 just fine?
      Obviously, your definition of 'fine'. I remember running Office XP on a Windows XP system with 128Mb. It can only be called 'fine' in a very perverted sense of that word.
    109. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      That's very true. On my machine, the graphics in KDE and Gnome are quite slow compared to Windows. The graphics in Windows hardly ever lag.
      Neither KDE nor Gnome are Linux. I know a person who used to own a PC with 64Mb RAM; WinXP was unusable on that, and Win2K only slightly better. Gentoo and XFCE ran fine.
    110. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Actually, Linux does exactly the same. It doesn't make sense to have unused RAM - unused means wasted. As long as OS discards the buffers when more memory is needed, there's no problem here.

    111. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ms1234 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Windows XP runs fine with 64MB of RAM. It was killing the harddrive though and startup from when the machine was put on to when software firewall and virusscanner had started was in the range of 10-15 minutes.

    112. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I ran Win95 on a 486dx, 66Mhz with 8mb of RAM and 500mb HD some years ago, without any problems. True, after startup the system had already swapped 3-4mb, but it worked and wasn't too slow.
      I even installed Suse Linux 5.3 including X server on the same disk, simultaneously. I had to compress my windows partition with drivespace to make it all fit...

    113. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1

      Hmmm that's like saying "My Hummer runs fine with a lawnmower engine installed. Sure it takes 10 to 15 minutes to get up to 60, but it runs"

    114. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Squozen · · Score: 1

      Yep, OS X is a dog on the 700Mhz/256Mb eMac at work, but lovely on my 1.5Ghz/1Gb PowerBook. Must be down to user expectations. I couldn't use a 256Mb machine for any serious work.

    115. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by One+Childish+N00b · · Score: 1

      It's not a joke about a train-wreck, the phrase 'train-wreck' is a phrase used to describe anything that has gone utterly and disasterously wrong. It's a phrase I use without thinking a lot of the time and it's part of acceptable language. I'm not going to spend all day every day watching every word I say for fear it could be construed as offensive by some group or another following events that happened halfway across the world.

      Please, I'm sad the crash happened and I'm sorry people died - I always hate to see loss of life due to tragic accidents, and my thoughts go out to the victims, but please, my language is my language and I'll use it however I want - I wouldn't stoop to the level of cracking jokes about those poor people, but I'm not going to 'watch what I say' at all times to avoid using a phrase that someone just looking to be offended (which a lot of these super-politically-correct people are) might just be able to pull a self-righteous thought-wank out of.

      --
      Dealing with lawyers would be a lot less tedious if they all looked like Casey Novak.
    116. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I remember it, for Win95 to run on a 4MB machine, it needed to be _installed_ when it had 4MB installed. It put on more optimized(less cruft?) dll's and such which let it run acceptably on 4MB. Installing the normal version, then trying to run that on less memory wouldn't work well, if at all.

      I never tried this, I just remember reading documentation that said this.

    117. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by isecore · · Score: 1

      My father is running XP with sp2 on his (by modern standards) ancient Compaq-laptop. That sucker is a Pentium3-450 with 192 megs of RAM and some sub-5000rpm harddrive.

      It's been running the same XP install för about a year now (since he "upgraded" to this computer from his old IBM Thinkpad/P2-300/64megs). I installed the XP, trimmed away some unnecessary services and he's happy as a clam.

      The thing runs surprisingly fast, the only app that runs somewhat slower than what I'd like is Photoshop, but everything else zooms away, including Office 2k3.

      On the other hand I've seen some seriously wicked systems (such as the dual Opteron with SLI'd graphics and 2 gigs of RAM that we do serious stuff on at work) running rather dogslow. Then again, that's a pretty much vanilla XP-install without any tweaks or twiddling applied. Hell, my old Athlon 2200+ at home feels snappier even though the Opteron totally crushes my computer in the benchmarks.

      Anyhoo, for what it's worth that kinda sums up my experiences.

      --
      I enjoy large posteriors and I cannot prevaricate.
    118. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by HillBilly · · Score: 1

      I used to use win 95 on a 386 dx-40 with 4mb ram. Took a bit of time to boot but it ran okay.

      --
      "Go into the hall of mirrors and have a bloody hard look at yourself" - HG Nelson
    119. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Windows applications have a nasty habit of putting themselves in the system tray unnecessarily, or running in the background or whatever. Lets not forget anti-virus and firewall software.


      This would have been a valid argument about 10 years ago, however you seem to be lacking an understanding of Modern Operating systems.

      The fact is, any process 'running in the background' as you call it will have all its VM pages swapped out to disk should Windows find something better to do with the memory. Even on 5 year-old machines, this process will take only a fraction of a second and with a DMA enabled hard-disk the user will not notice it at all. Incidentally, the algorythms Windows uses are far more optimized and advanced than the equivilent Linux code.

      A decent Linux setup doesn't require anywhere near that much. Seriously, Linux on my system uses a fraction of the resources of XP, and this is the case with many other systems I've seen.

      You're either deluded, have rose-tinted specs glued to your face or you're not comparing apples to apples. If 'your' Linux setup can run fine on a fraction of the resources of XP, that's great, but don't forget to mention that you don't use X and yor read slashdot through lynx. As it stands, the only direct comparision to XP at the moment is either a fully-fledged Gnome or KDE install - and do not - do not - try and tell anyone that they work fine on 128Mb of RAM, because it is a fallacy. Even before you load up any apps (which might well have to load up their own set of widgets and controlling libs), Gnome struggles on anything less than 256, and, as pointed out, is still not as slick or responsive as a comparable instance of XP.

    120. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ha ha... great mp reference

    121. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Taladar · · Score: 1
      ...and Ratpoison if you want to be really cool.
      While I agree with the general idea of your post this sentence just hit me. I am using ratpoison on all my Linux computers because I am a keyboard junkie and don't want to waste time on customizing appearance of my WM when I run everything maximized anyway (in Windows and in KDE, Gnome, Xfce, Icewm and Fvwm which I tried before I found ratpoison). Ratpoison simply allows me to focus on my consoles, browser and other programs without wasting space on the screen for things I never use and without wasting my time when customizing them away. It is a minimal approach where I add what I need instead of removing what I don't, a bit like Gentoo
    122. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Most modern operating systems will use all free memory for disk cache, and quickly flush non-dirty cache pages when more space is needed. Windows is slightly unusual in that it has a completely unified cache architecture - allocated memory is actually allocated on disk (although it may not actually ever be written to the disk) and the page file is cached using the disk caching mechanism.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    123. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      heres a tip.

      get sarge or sid.. or http://distrowatch.com/kanotix/

    124. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      http://slackware.com/install/sysreq.php :

      Slackware Linux doesn't require an extremely powerful system to run (though having one is quite nice :). It will run on systems as far back as the 486. Below is a list of minimum system requirements needed to install and run Slackware.

      * 486 processor
      * 16MB RAM (32MB suggested)
      * 100-500 megabytes of hard disk space for a minimal and around 3.5GB for full install
      * 3.5" floppy drive

      Additional hardware may be needed if you want to run the X Window System at a usable speed or if you want network capabilities.

    125. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by pcmanjon · · Score: 1

      "That's better than what can be said of many Linux distributions (I'm thinking Fedora Core 3 here). Same with OS X (I'm thinking Mac Mini here).
      "

      Of course you mention the most bloated peice of shit Linux distro for an example.

      Perhaps you should try Damn Small Linux, and see if your opinion is the same.

    126. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by spuzzzzzzz · · Score: 1

      Have a look at wmi. I found it rather more intuitive than Ratpoison (which I only tried very briefly, admittedly).

      --

      Don't you hate meta-sigs?
    127. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by MORB · · Score: 1

      I guess your mileage may vary.

      I was disappointed by the gnome performance nack when I last tried it (which was a while ago, so it surely improved since then).
      However, KDE fast and snappy.

      As for windows... Well, the UI, in itself and by itself, is fast.
      However, performances are dragged down by the less than stellar filesystem and vm management.
      When I press windows-e, I would expect an explorer to open immediately, but too often I have to wait at few seconds, if no more.
      When I then browse to some directory on my hard disk, which I must admit are a mess, I can't stand having to wait for seconds before the file list appears.
      There's no excuse for taking that long on a modern machine to list a directory containing even hundred of items. Konqueror does it just fine.
      I also hate when the system freeze out of the blue for up to dozens of seconds at a time while I'm using visual studio.
      I witnessed all these symptoms on various machines, including a freshly installed opteron.

    128. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by tombeard · · Score: 1

      There is no enviromental damage from throwing your old PCs in the trash. I just dig them out and run them in my basement or give them to friends that can't afford and dont need (who does?) the shiniest new toy on the market. Please, keep throwing them away, just don't bury them in garbage.

      --
      The reason we subjugate ourselves to law is to better procure justice. If law does not accomplish this purpose then it m
    129. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by turbidostato · · Score: 0

      "The X Windowing System on Linux runs (by default) with priority 0 (zero)The X Windowing System on Linux runs (by default) with priority 0 (zero)"

      Again, the same ol'story.

      You can talk about "Linux" as (only) the kernel, or you can talk about "Linux distribution [X]", where [X] is the distribution you are talking about, but talking about "Linux makes things this or that way" is simply nonsense.

      So, in order not to seem a dumb ignorant, please avoid saying things like "Linux doesn't run on less than 128MB", or "Windows XP is [faster|slower] than Linux" or "X-Window runs on Linux with 0 niceness by default".

      Just as an example; the X-Window system runs by default at -10 niceness on Linux... on Debian GNU/Linux "Woody", I mean. Other distributions, other defaults.

    130. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by turbidostato · · Score: 0

      "That process only takes a few clock cycles" ...and a ton of I/O operations.

      I don't know about Win2003, but I do know for sure both WinNT4 and Win2000 don't seem to be too clever about when releasing caches or dumping pages to swap; from my own experience it always seems to get some two/three seconds too late. It's a bit disappointing when you see you have a lot of free (cached) RAM and still it takes some three four seconds to "bring back" the Word document you left unused for ten minutes.

    131. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Makarakalax · · Score: 1

      I once wrote a post like yours, about 2 weeks later I realised that people call things what they call them and being a pedantic fool wouldn't endear me to anyone.

    132. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by 5,+egregious · · Score: 1

      Just as a matter of comparison here... With my 2003 spec laptop (P4M 1.6Ghz, 256 meg RAM, 64 Meg Nvidia 4200) running Fedora Core 3, X 6.8.2, KDE 3.4 with Composite enabled, Top tells me X is using 13% memory and 2% CPU. Of course, the alpha channel and other nifty stuff is being pushed through the GPU but it still shows the alternatives out there. It would be interesting to see Longhorn running on a 2003 spec machine in 2006.

    133. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This description of the Windows' GUI priority simply isn't true.

      (a) Unlike on X Windows systems, the Windows GUI isn't a separate process. It doesn't have its own priority.

      (b) The current foreground thread (i.e. the thread that owns the currently activated window) gets a 1 point priority boost. For a typical process this will put the priority to Normal+1, which is still less than AboveNormal, High and RealTime. It is by no means "the highest priority in the system".

    134. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Enigma_Man · · Score: 1

      You have both a hilarious post and username. Well done :)

      -Jesse

      --
      Nothing says "unprofessional job" like wrinkles in your duct tape.
    135. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by nurd68 · · Score: 1

      Or Ubuntu...

    136. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by nurd68 · · Score: 1

      FC3 and OSX 10.3 came out, what? 2 YEARS after XP? Sounds like a logical keeping up with the rate of progress in the PC industry, to me.

    137. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by cartel · · Score: 1

      I guess I'm just comparing the windowing systems. Should have been more specific. But with console stuff, I do say that Linux is incredibly fast.

    138. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Suppafly · · Score: 1

      Of course you mention the most bloated peice of shit Linux distro for an example.

      Perhaps you should try Damn Small Linux, and see if your opinion is the same.


      But then that wouldn't be a fair comparision, if you are going to compare the latest MS offering, you need to compare it to a linux distro that is running KDE or Gnome.

    139. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by agallagh42 · · Score: 1

      In the past few years people had started to replace it with tsunami ("to be more scientifically accurate")

      Why would tsunami be more scientifically accurate? Both "tidal wave" and "tsunami" are valid scientific terms. They refer to two very different types of waves, but "tsunami" is no more valid when used as an idiom.

      --
      Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
    140. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by The+Infamous+Grimace · · Score: 1

      Gonna have to look into that. I like the form factor of my HP 1210 psc, but am sick and tired of the invasive apps and crappy drivers.

      (tig)

      --
      Ignorance and prejudice and fear
      Walk hand in hand
    141. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      But this is not the case of "just" being pedantic (think of "it's not Linux, it's GNU/Linux or the like).

      This time, the misconception about "Linux" and "a given Linux distribution" leads to genuine mistake to the one that reads it, so I feel my rant justified. Just look at the answer the original poster got in the lines of "ah! so you can renice X and then everything goes fine? tell me how" when more than probably it is not a solution (if he uses -he probably does, a distribution that already renices X on 2.4 kernels) or might even be a problem by itself (if he uses 2.6 kernel or a 2.4 with a kolivas patch, for instance).

      Indeed, the "linux vs linux distribution" misconception is one that I tend to rant about since it is on the basis of a very great percentage of nonsenses to be read around here, so I try -albeit pedantically, it seems, to give my 2 cents to make people more aware about what the real advantages or Linux as open source can give to them.

    142. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      A single low-level kernel is NOT an operating system, it's just part of one. The Linux kernel, for example, is not by itself an operating system, since it cannot operate alone.

      Kinda sorta true, but the operating system is effectively the kernel with an interface, such as a commandline or GUI tool. Environment is all the extra tools, graphics and gewgaws which remove the end user from the mundane interactivity with the kernal at higher level. Windows has removed the end user to a very high level, which is apparent when end users say (like happened yesterday) "I can't find PE_Survey.EXE" because the .EXE extention is hidden and the application is represented by a Tool Type icon (this is a function of Windows Explorer.) Depending upon user configuration and experience I may encounter various levels of confusion with end users knowing what I'm talking about when I refer to Hard Disk or 'C' drive (which in Windows are really partitions, funny they still haven't got to named devices...)

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    143. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the bit about "Longhorn will run fine on a 1GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM" being good rather disturbing.

      Why? That's what any modern desktop OS requires. Have you looked at what it takes to run OS X these days? (Hint: it's a PowerPC that runs at an equivalent speed to a 1 GHz Intel, with 256 MB of RAM.) Have you looked at what Gnome or KDE take if you want to run them with full eye candy turned on? (Hint: you don't want to try that on anything slower than 1 GHz or with less than 256 MB of RAM.)

    144. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why MS ever come up with the concept that an OS was suuposed to be anything but a platform on which to run apps.

      Wasn't it Apple who came up with that idea? All that iLife crap, iTunes built into the OS and so on. If I run the OS upgrade tool on my Mac, it tries to get me to download an update to the iPod software! I don't even have a fucking iPod! But Apple aren't just integrating media playback into their OS, they've integrated their fucking portable media player!

      I really, really don't think Microsoft are the kings of bloat and bundling any more. Sorry, but Apple have overtaken them yet again.

    145. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      I agree. I run both XP SP2 and OS-X and see the same crap you describe.

      How I wish all the apps I need and interoperability with others on my network were rock-solid under Linux. SOmeday soon, maybe...

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    146. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least you're not flattened.

    147. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go back to your 90fps panels you nub. I have some work to do.

    148. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by RailGunner · · Score: 1

      Vector 5 SOHO would be a good choice. Uses KDE, and it's optimized, and is pretty nimble.

    149. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Why would tsunami be more scientifically accurate?

      Tsunamis are bigger than tidal waves, and users of the idiom were trying to refer to the largest possible movement of water.

    150. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      but the operating system is effectively the kernel with an interface, such as a commandline or GUI tool

      Well, if that's how you choose to define those words, then yes. But those aren't the definitions found in English dictionaries, or in computer science textbooks- so you'd be speaking a different language than everyone else.

      Many people, for example, have built useful Linux computers with neither a command line nor GUI installed.

      Environment is all the extra tools

      "Environment", like "system", is a hugely generic word, which by itself can mean almost anything at all.

    151. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      I'd call Mac OS X a train wreck. It's interface can barely be called usable and it fights tooth and nail to keep from doing the things it needs to do. It drives me nuts that people rant on about how good OS X is. Pbbt maybe if they've only used Windows. Examples? Why the hell can you mount an ftp site as a drive but there is no way to write to the drive even if you supplied the needed username and password? Why can't you alt-tab (or open apple-tab) through ALL open windows? Why do home, end, page up, and page down not work correctly? Why does the finder bring the whole system to a crawl if it gets fscked up? Why does the system feel the need to change the screen resolution if you boot up with your monitor turned off? Why does the middle mouse button not work in half my applications? The dock is just retarted. It has a lot of gee-whiz factor but it isn't very usable. Why does the default theme hide the title-bar icons under colored fobs that you can't see past until you hover your cursor over them? Why can't you even just pick a background color of your choice? It's just hard to find the window you're looking for when you have a lot of apps open - not helped any by the tendacy of OS X to only show you one of an apps windows when flipping through those windows. Why do so many apps open windows BEHIND the currently focused window when you activate them? Why is there no decent FTP client for OS X? I've tried more than half a dozen and they all suck. (Today I lost three days work because one of these decided to erase my files from the server without asking for permission first. I'm just a little bitter. Of course if it were my server I'd be okay.. I make backups every hour. *sigh*) Argh I could rant on for hours about the evils of the Mac UI and how bad so many of it's apps are.

      To me, Windows is more like a nucleur waste dump. It might glow in pretty colors and breed some interesting stuff but in the end it'll still kill you. Windows is a truely horrible operating system. If I sound like OS X annoys me then don't even get me started on Windows. At least OS X can handle software installation in a way that isn't completely moronic. More than I can say for Windows. Any OS that asks you to reboot after software installation obviously has something wrong with it.

      To be fair, I have a bitch list about my OS of choice, Linux, too. Such as why nobody has yet bothered to make a single, unified, extensible, flexible programming interface to configuring Linux boxes that is easy and powerful both. I'm not talking UI - I mean an API. There should be a standard service running that takes speaks XML-RPC and can allow systems and services to be managed and configured. This would allow programmers to write different interfaces for managing these systems without having to mess with the internals of 5000 different programs. We could finally see some improvement. Why don't distros give you tools to reconfigure your system that are as easy to use as those that they now provide to install your system? X is a major pain to reconfigure in most cases but it's easy enough to install and configure initally. This is just silly. Why is there still no decent support for user-level filesystems and why aren't these filesystems bundled by default? ftpfs, sshfs, etc should definately be included. KDE and Gnome shouldn't need their own virtual filesystem layers. Why aren't there filesystems for managing file reversions, verifying files are not duplicated, managing meta data, etc. This is Unix where everything is supposed to be a fricken file. Have they forgotten that?

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    152. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like you are describing a cache to disk, not something already in memory. This is the result of not enough memory to service the active processes. That is a big difference from keeping things in memory in case they are needed later.

      See here for more info..

    153. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by agallagh42 · · Score: 1

      "Tsunamis are bigger than tidal waves"

      Not always. There was a small tsunami created by one of the aftershocks of the big Indian Ocean earthquake that was measured at just a few inches. Basically, small earthquake = small tsunami, and big earthquake = big tsunami.

      However, since the largest tsunami is almost certainly bigger than the largest tidal wave, you probably have a point. :)

      --
      Carpe Cerevisi - Seize the Beer
    154. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by wasabii · · Score: 1

      Incorrect. The vast majority of distros these days distribute X with a higher (lower nice) priority. Yet my X still feels slow.

      Dragging this Firefox window around for instance... As I move it over Xchat and evolution, I see massive screen refreshes. Things flickering on and off. As they do, the window I am draggign stutters.

      So, we have to wonder still how Windows makes this any better, because it does. When I drag windows around (on the same system) in XP, over outlook, and IE, I don't even notice a refresh. I suspect they are just double buffering each window. When GTK refreshes it seems to go through a complete widget tree refresh ( you can see the widgets refresh in order).

    155. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by cnettel · · Score: 1
      It ran and was kind of usable with 4 MB on a 486 DX 33. I think the difference to a 120 MHz system may be that the memory gets to be a much more central bottleneck in that system, compared to an overall crippled machine.

      And, yeah, XP runs fine with 128 MB. Just open a few apps at a time. It doesn't match my usage, but a simple "check mail, process words in plain documents" person is probably quite satisfied, at least 'til you tell them about the difference 256 will bring.

    156. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Windows doesn't normally use double-buffering. There are a few exceptions - the screen behind drop-down menus is restored using a buffer and some non-rectangular and transparent windows are double-buffered. Also some applications do their own buffering. For example, IE buffers the web-page, but not the toolbar. Outlook doesn't do buffering.

      In summary, if you're dragging a window, then the window behind is usually being repainted from scratch, not from a buffer.

      And there's no reason why this should be slow. My Acorn Archimedes A310 (a seventeen year old ARM-based computer) can drag and repaint windows in real time.

      X is slow. I don't know why. People invent bullshit theories (like the GP post) to explain it. X-apologists refuse to accept it. But, as any user can tell you, X is a pig.

      I agree with the parent. It would be nice if someone could find out why.

    157. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Digital+Pizza · · Score: 1
      I'm really surprised that it ran so well for you; as I said, I had to remove the sound card just to get it to even boot! When it did run, it was killing the hard drive with non-stop swapping. I couldn't have launched even one program. Oh well, that hardware is long gone now, so no way to check anymore :-)

      I used to run XP (and Win2K before that) on a Sony VAIO N505VX laptop, which was maxed out at 128MB; I'd agree with your assessment. It was liveable but not great. I would have kept that notebook if only Sony hadn't put such a stupid memory limit on it. Fedora was just unuseably slow on it.

      --
      We apologize for the inconvenience.
    158. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, your X has higher priority than evolution. You move the firefox window around, X responds immidiately by telling evolution that it's window needs to be redrawn. Evolution has low priority, and has to wait for X to finish. X has other things to do, so evolution doesn't get to run while X processes some more requests from the window manager, which tells it to move the window around even more, queueing up even more events for evolution.

      There's a reason that the scheduler programmers tell people to not give X higher priority.

    159. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Longhorn will run fine on a 1GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM

      If that's true, it's a HUGE improvement. On XP here, with 2.6 GHz and 768 MB RAM, and it's so slow that the only reason I endure it is that I try to convince myself that as long as I get paid to waste my time I don't really care.

      Reasonable system requirements (without getting paid for wasting my time) for XP would be minimum 8 GHz, assuming a linear speedup, so if longhorn works well with 1 GHz, that's a huge improvement.

    160. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of None by bedessen · · Score: 1

      Thank you. This is correct information. There is no one "GUI process" in Windows. Mod parent up and mod down grandparent.

  2. Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's even uglier than XP, which is no small feat.

    1. Re:Train wreck indeed by neyneyjung · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is it just me, or the folder from Start button giving me the middle finger?

    2. Re:Train wreck indeed by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1
    3. Re:Train wreck indeed by a-dac · · Score: 1

      Looks gnomish

    4. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, they've started showing folders turned 90 degrees. Now that's innovation.

    5. Re:Train wreck indeed by NatteringNabob · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I haven't been able to look at the screenshots as the site appears to be slashdoted, but I find it impossible to believe that any UI could be uglier than XP. My major complaint with XP isn't really the look though, it is the incredible amount of screen space it wastes in favor of eye candy. The first thing I do with an XP machine is set it back to Win95 mode and pick the classic skin for media player (which is truly an abomination with the default skin). Of course, these days I hardly run Windows at all since Fedora Core 3 does everything that I need a computer to do, and does it better and for less money than any version of Windows. I doubt Longhorn will be a train wreck as there are millions of people that will upgrade no matter how good or bad it is, and Microsoft will spend billions persuading them it is the best thing to do. It is amazing that people never catch on to the old wine in a new bottle trick. Of course, in the case of Windows, we aren't just talking about any old wine, we talking about vintage 30 year old Gallo Hearty Burgundy.

    6. Re:Train wreck indeed by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 5, Insightful
      God..Why can't - after 2000, XP and 3 years in development - the HORRID ancient bitmap artwork for "Control Panel" icon, etc. go away!

      This is exactly the lack of focus on essential detail that will make LH a sad, second-level retread of W2K for users. Yeah, it's got an improved driver and development model. Yeah, web services are integrated throughout. It drives like a tank.

      UI is artless and amature. Better work is seen on DeviantArt.com

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    7. Re:Train wreck indeed by John+Seminal · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's even uglier than XP, which is no small feat

      I agree, I don't like the look of XP, that is why when I use a XP machine I change the look back to windows classic. One I do that, it looks and feels exactly like my windows 2000 machine.

      And what do those screenshots tell us anyways? I did not see anything new, something to make me excited about the new windows.

      Maybe Microsoft is stuck in their 1998 way of thinking, when the new "version" of windows had people lining up outside of CompUSA at 5am to get a good space in line to be the first to own the new version. That will not happen again. Windows 2000 can do just about anything a user wants, it can play DVD movies, surf the web, play games. Why do we need a new version of Windows?

      I would like to see Micrsoft do 2 things they won't. 1) I want greater control of my PC, but with the push for more DRM, I will get less control of my machine. And related to #1, I want to have tools work my way, I want to opt-in rather than opt-out, I want most services turned off unless I turn them on. 2) I would like Windows to come with some more software than just solitare. I'd love to see Windows come loaded with OpenOffice and Mozilla, and a ton of Open Source software. It would be a great sign of stregnth, to give away those products and then tell people "You have Open Office which is good, but for something really great come and buy Office".

      I doubt Windows will do any of those things.

      --

      Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."

    8. Re:Train wreck indeed by gg3po · · Score: 1

      That's exactly the way I felt. The icons and the button widgets are especially ugly. This is one area where both Linux and OS X are way ahead of the Redmond camp, IMHO.

      --
      ---
    9. Re:Train wreck indeed by Eberlin · · Score: 1

      I'll bite.

      I actually like it. Then again, I'm a Kubuntu user and themes are themes, so to me this is just another "theme." Nothing that makes me go "oooh" or "wow, that's revolutionary!!!"

      I see plastik with a fancy looking trash icon. Basically stuff Linux has already ripped off from XP and MacOS X.

      I do hope that all this is a departure from the XP theme with those clunky title bars and gigantic/obstrusive buttons. Screen real estate is a premium (firefox got this right over IE), giant playskool buttons don't help -- they just get in the way. (on that note, "Shut Do..." won't do).

    10. Re:Train wreck indeed by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Maybe Microsoft is stuck in their 1998 way of thinking, when the new "version" of windows had people lining up outside of CompUSA at 5am to get a good space in line to be the first to own the new version. That will not happen again. Windows 2000 can do just about anything a user wants, it can play DVD movies, surf the web, play games. Why do we need a new version of Windows?

      Because at some point Microsoft will force the upgrade by sabotaging existing Win2k installs. No more service packs, patches or support. Doubtless WMP-Longhorn will get some delightful codecs that will not work on Win2k.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    11. Re:Train wreck indeed by Total_Wimp · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I wouldn't read too much into the current visuals. It's very common for MS products to look very different between beta and gold. For example, XP had the desert dunes wallpaper as default in the beta but switched to the grassy hills wallpaper for the release. There are a lot of other good examples out there if you think back to previous MS betas.

      Don't get me wrong, I have a healthy dislike for XP over the very clean Win2K and I don't welcome more of the same. Just pointing out that what you see now is unlikely to be what you see when the product actually ships.

      TW

    12. Re:Train wreck indeed by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

      Given the depth of the Redmond pockets, the fact that they consistently deliver sub-optimal stuff smacks of a meta-design, to me. You and your http://www.conspiracyarchive.com/ link, JC!

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    13. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's almost as ugly as that supersite for windows design.

    14. Re:Train wreck indeed by biglig2 · · Score: 1

      I disagree on the big buttons. After much experimenting, I've ended up with large icons on my Quicklaunch toolbar - being larger they are easier targets to hit, and so more efficent.

      I do loose some screen space to it, but on the other hand having the quicklaunch icons set to large makes the task bar and the notificaiton area stack up in double rows.

      --
      ~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
    15. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      Wow, they've started showing folders turned 90 degrees. Now that's innovation.

      Wait until you see the flying papers when you do a file copy - they're now wearing aviator goggles and flying scarves. And they're brining back Clippie, but for audio this time and calling him DJ Clipmaster. "Yo! Looks like ya gonna spin some trax!" (2 years in R&D for that one).

    16. Re:Train wreck indeed by Phillup · · Score: 5, Funny

      God..Why can't - after 2000, XP and 3 years in development - the HORRID ancient bitmap artwork for "Control Panel" icon, etc. go away!

      Because Apple doesn't have a control panel icon for them to use?

      (yeah, yeah... I know. System Preferences. It was a JOKE!)

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    17. Re:Train wreck indeed by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 2
      Paranoia runs deep
      Into your life, it will creep
      It starts when your always afraid
      Step outta line, the men come and take you away

      ~ Steven Stills and Buffalo Springfield, 1967

      There are valid reasons for many of these design choices. They also have unintended sde effects - some of which are surely deemed as features by "Central Services."

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    18. Re:Train wreck indeed by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Windows 2000 can do just about anything a user wants, it can play DVD movies, surf the web, play games. Why do we need a new version of Windows?

      Look what a better company, like Apple, can do with new OS releases. There are tons of reason to want new versions of Windows, they just need to add new features like Apple does.

    19. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would something like icon-zooming remedy this without having to compromise on the screen space?

      I guess I'm kinda hypocritical since I don't do the whole "auto-hide" thing. I like my screen space, but I like to have control of the panel (kicker?) at all times, too.

      While I'm on the screen space thing, multiple desktops are a lot like tabbed browsing -- you don't know you needed it but after using it for a while, you'll miss it on machines that don't have it available.

    20. Re:Train wreck indeed by dlockamy · · Score: 1

      no that would be the upside down arow that firefox uses as the download icon

      I've always thought that thing was giving me the middle finger

    21. Re:Train wreck indeed by T3kno · · Score: 1

      Um, in the case of Windows I would compare it to a "vintage" 6 month old bottle of Night Train

      --
      (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
    22. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably runs like it, too.

    23. Re:Train wreck indeed by charstar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Doubtless WMP-Longhorn will get some delightful codecs that will not work on Win2k.


      Or anywhere else for that matter. I still can't play many .wmv files on my 'amd64' build of Gentoo.
    24. Re:Train wreck indeed by cortana · · Score: 1

      Now that just can't be true. Only Electronic Arts has the foresight and innovation to spell the word "tracks" like "trax". This is such a ground breaking innovation that they trademarked it! (http://www.easports.com/articles/trax.jsp)

      jesus christ that press release even uses the phrase "win-win situation" kill me now

    25. Re:Train wreck indeed by avalys · · Score: 5, Funny

      "For example, XP had the desert dunes wallpaper as default in the beta but switched to the grassy hills wallpaper for the release."

      Uh huh. Quite the paradigm shift, there.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    26. Re:Train wreck indeed by cortana · · Score: 1

      So you're saying it's less ugly than Windows XP? :)

    27. Re:Train wreck indeed by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Imagine a grey windows XP...that has the style of a poorly done winamp skin...and you begin to see the horror that is Long Horn.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    28. Re:Train wreck indeed by Predathar · · Score: 1

      Yes but whenever Microsoft tries to add features, they get blasted by the MONOPOLY and UNFAIR PRACTICE police.

    29. Re:Train wreck indeed by PabloJones · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "they just need to add new features"

      Not just new features... they have to add features that people actually want. Apple does this.

      For example, Expose was the big hit of Panther, and now Spotlight and Dashboard are going to be the big hits of Tiger. Sure, the performance and GUI enhancements are nice (except for perhaps the Finder), but they are a sideshow.

      Microsoft needs to add something that will make people actually want to upgrade. They can say they will improve security, but that isn't something the average user will notice right away. In fact, it should be something the user doesn't notice at all since the OS should protect them in the first place. Microsoft needs to have something that has a tangible effect on the end user.

      If people can't tell between XP (or 2000, or ME for that matter), they are in for trouble. Then they won't bother purchasing it. But if they see that there is a good reason to upgrade, they will.

      Jaguar and Panther could both play DVDs, surf the web and play games... but Apple came out with features in Panther that made people able to do those things easier and/or better than before.

      My point is that most new features are mostly marketing fluff, and if M$ wants really pull this off, they have to offer something truly innovative and useful.

    30. Re:Train wreck indeed by aaronl · · Score: 1

      No, icon zooming is a bad idea. Things shouldn't move around like that, it makes the system harder to use. Leave icons and such in place and just make them arranged better and a bit larger. For example, every program throwing crap on the desktop is a bad thing. All the programs now that use the notification area is a bad thing. (Note the name there: notification.) As for the QuickLaunch, MS even turns that off by default now, making you use the seriously oversized and substantially more useless start menu. It's similar to throwing more buttons on the keyboard. It was only more convenient before because there was a few extra buttons that had obvious use. My keyboard has a pile of useless buttons, and I chose it because it was one of the ones out there that had the least of them damned things. Why do I need "Webcam, Messenger, iTouch, Search, Shopping, or F-Lock"?

      Sigh.

    31. Re:Train wreck indeed by lw54 · · Score: 1

      Instead of the default shades of blue in WinXP, imagine dull and dreary shades of grey and you'll be close to the color scheme showin in the Longhorn pics.

    32. Re:Train wreck indeed by neuroklinik · · Score: 1

      DAMN I wish I had mod points. Funniest thing I've read in ages. DJ Clipmaster. I love it!

    33. Re:Train wreck indeed by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      That's just an old asset. XP has a 32bit color plus alpha icon for the control panel. The only thing totally busted as far as I can tell is the icons for the individual "administrative tools", which are rather aged.

      Also, the window dressing for XP was totally different in the beta. I imagine that they're doing the same here. You should be able to visually identify whether you are running the beta or the official relase.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    34. Re:Train wreck indeed by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      Oh, that's what I mean! Open up shell32.dll with any resource editor or icon viewer. There is no excuse on earth for some of these things to still exist in XP, much less LH.

      Sloppy, clueless, bad.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    35. Re:Train wreck indeed by nick8325 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      One thing that never ceases to amuse me is the font folder.

      Try bringing up c:\windows\fonts or Control Panel->Fonts.

      Then File->Install New Font.

      What appears? A genuine Windows 3.x dialog box. I kid you not. One with 16-colour icons and separate controls for choosing the drive and the directory. One which looked old in Windows 95 and is still in Windows 2003.

      There's a picture of it in action at http://www.ascendercorp.com/fonthelp/fonthelp_wind ows.html

      These sorts of problems are really sloppy.

    36. Re:Train wreck indeed by wik · · Score: 1

      Pretty good for a 50 Cent OS.

      --
      / \
      \ / ASCII ribbon campaign for peace
      x
      / \
    37. Re:Train wreck indeed by ezweave · · Score: 1

      I am not an MS lover by any means, but I have seen a few shots of the "Glass" UI that look pretty interesting. If you actually peruse the site, you will see that the new UI isn't scheduled for release unitl late 2005 (Beta 2).

      Some of those features look lame as all get out: the scrolling option on the Start menu for one.

      I can't stand the Windows UI, so I skin it and call it a day...

      I think the truth is that UIs are getting stale and that the 3d desktop is going to change things (like Java project looking glass: http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/J2 SE/Desktop/lookingglass/

    38. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is exactly the lack of focus on essential detail that will make LH a sad, second-level retread of W2K for users.

      And just think, 10s of millions of people will be running it soon, and then there will be longhorn only apps, and so if you want to be cool, you'll have to have it too.

      The theme looks like it is trying to be shiny but subdued, not the bright toddler toy colors of XP, so props on that for the effort, but the results do look a bit cold and bland. Maybe they should contract someone from deviant art. Tons of great work there.

    39. Re:Train wreck indeed by buraianto · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I find it interesting that you feel that not releasing more service packs, patches, and no longer supporting an operating system is sabotaging it. I'm afraid that the end-of-life of any product is something you'll have to get used to. There is an end to the support of everything. Operating systems, cars, computers, you name it.

      When I saw the word "sabotage" I was assuming you were going to state that Microsoft was going to do something devious and illegal. But you just said that they will stop working on it. I am not sure, but it seems that Microsoft has been supporting their operating systems for longer periods than Red Hat has. I know, I know, you don't get the source, but that probably doesn't make a difference to most users. Unless we can expect them to learn the code and fix bugs for an entire distribution by themselves.

    40. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      \/
      x
      /\
      \/

      Ascii ribbon campain for dead dismembered rabbits.

    41. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Yes but whenever Microsoft tries to add features, they get blasted by the MONOPOLY and UNFAIR PRACTICE police.

      Microsoft has earned it.

    42. Re:Train wreck indeed by subsolar2 · · Score: 1

      It's even uglier than XP, which is no small feat.


      It is no uglier than Keramic or a dozen of other KDE or Gnome themes. They are trying to follow Apple's "glass" looking themes.
    43. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, most sane people just drag their fonts into the Fonts folder to have Windows install them, which is the way it should work.

    44. Re:Train wreck indeed by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Jaguar and Panther could both play DVDs, surf the web and play games... but Apple came out with features in Panther that made people able to do those things easier and/or better than before.

      The only *major* changes in OS X since its release have been Expose and Quartz Extreme - and even the former is largely the domain of advanced users (the latter is almost completely invisible to the user). Everything else has been incremental improvements and refinements, much like we see in every version of Windows.

    45. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I can still buy just about anything I need for a 1934 Ford coupe.. Even seat belts and reverse lights which were not required in the US until about 30 years later. Ford does not make the parts but many others do. Far more people have been forced into a newer version of Windows then need parts for a car that old.

    46. Re:Train wreck indeed by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Because at some point Microsoft will force the upgrade by sabotaging existing Win2k installs. No more service packs, patches or support.

      Time for a reality check. By the time Longhorn is actually released, Windows 2000 will be 6 - going on 7 - years old. That's quite a reasonable support window (and certainly as long, if not longer, than any alternatives).

    47. Re:Train wreck indeed by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      Spotlight and dashboard are not the only exciting features of tiger.
      I myself, am looking forward to automator and h.264 more than anything else!

      --
      If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
    48. Re:Train wreck indeed by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      It is the same space waste, with different eye candy. I think it looks better than XP, but it is subjective.

    49. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right... because dragging the icon for a font onto an obscure folder is very mnemonic for "install a font". Yeesh.

    50. Re:Train wreck indeed by needacoolnickname · · Score: 1
      I haven't been able to look at the screenshots as the site appears to be slashdoted, but I find it impossible to believe that any UI could be uglier than XP.

      Well, the site seems to be back up and they are uglier. In the vein of KDE it looks like to me with a little bit o blackbox window tiles there for effect. At least the XP screen looked like it was made for kids, this is just plain ugly.

    51. Re:Train wreck indeed by loconet · · Score: 5, Funny

      Because the Control Panel is tightly integrated into the OS and thus the icon cannot and MUST NOT be changed. You cannot change the icon colours without changing the way the calc.exe does addition, if you change calc.exe, Windows Explorer will change to a maroon colour which then will result in kernel32.dll not being found which is needed by notepad.exe and thus it will not start-up and if notepad doesn't start, Internet Explorer will need to work "Offline" and we know what happens when Internet Explorer is "Offline", you cannot login to MSN Messenger!

      --
      [alk]
    52. Re:Train wreck indeed by dtfinch · · Score: 1

      I've spent hours installing and testing theme after theme only to return to the Red Hat default of BlueCurve. I even made it my default in XFCE on Ubuntu. It's just easier to look at.

    53. Re:Train wreck indeed by snuf23 · · Score: 0

      Ok, so there is a folder and it's called "Fonts". You get there by clicking on it in the control panel. This opens the folder called "Fonts" and it shows you inside, all these fonts. So you can open it and see, "ooooh, font folder with fonts in it". Then you can maybe think "This appears to be wherer fonts go. Hey I bet I can put a font in here and then I can use it".
      Hardly obscure dumbass. I suppose you consider it proper to drag an app off a CD to install it but not drag a font?

      --
      Sometimes my arms bend back.
    54. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God..Why can't - after 2000, XP and 3 years in development - the HORRID ancient bitmap artwork for "Control Panel" icon, etc. go away!

      I imagine they did that because they anticipate you will be in there working when the only output to your system is VGA because your graphics card drivers aren't loaded, or you booted into safe mode...etc If they designed some fancy graphics for the control panel and had to make another set of graphics for VGA mode you would be yelling bloat too.

    55. Re:Train wreck indeed by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      According to packages.gentoo.org, mplayer is stable on amd64 and I use mplayer
      all the time on x86 to play wmv files. Is there something special about the
      amd64 build that doesn't handle wmv files?

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
    56. Re:Train wreck indeed by charstar · · Score: 1

      yah, win32codecs :(

    57. Re:Train wreck indeed by fbg111 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'd love to see Windows come loaded with OpenOffice and Mozilla, and a ton of Open Source software. It would be a great sign of stregnth, to give away those products and then tell people "You have Open Office which is good, but for something really great come and buy Office".

      BWAAAHAHAHAHA!!! Good one! ROTFLMFAO!

      Oh, you were serious... Ahem, sorry.

      I doubt Windows will do any of those things.

      Yeah, me too...

      --
      Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
    58. Re:Train wreck indeed by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      The XP icons can contain multiple bitmaps - from 72x 24-bit plus Alpha - down to 16x 4-bit. The driver parameters can override which representation is used.

      If there is to be an economy of "bloat", shell32.dll and its kin are a false economy.

      It's just shoddy.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    59. Re:Train wreck indeed by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      BTW: I am pretty pro-windows in many respects. Just not on client presentation and UI advancement.

      AD - now that it has management tools - and Windows IPSec and Kerberos are all done right. AD is a directory made useful far beyond bare-bones LDAP, and with more fully realized utility than NDS. It is what VINES was becoming - before Allchin left to work on NT5!

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    60. Re:Train wreck indeed by buraianto · · Score: 1

      Ford still stopped supporting the car. Those who own a 1934 Ford coupe are also paying a bunch of money for custom stuff made by small companies. It is cheaper to buy a new Ford than to own that 1934 Ford. It seems to me to be a similar situation to operating systems: I assume it costs more to run an unsupported operating system (due to security vulnerabilities, lack of new features, etc.); but hey, nobody's forcing you to stay with it.

      As the original poster was equating ceasing support for an opeating system with sabotage I was stating my opinion that this is a normal thing in the lifetime of every product, so sabotage is not an appropriate designation, nor is the action devious.

    61. Re:Train wreck indeed by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "It's even uglier than XP, which is no small feat."

      So.. as anybody actually seen the video of Longhorn in action?

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    62. Re:Train wreck indeed by wasteve · · Score: 1

      If you have the 32 bit emulation libraries installed you can compile a 32 bit version of mplayer that can use the win32 codecs. Just put them in different directories and you can have both installed.

    63. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are trying to follow Apple's "glass" looking themes. ... and failing, because they don't get it.

    64. Re:Train wreck indeed by Velk · · Score: 1

      My dad had a lot of trouble with that concept unfortunately.
      Ended up with a font folder full of links, http links, html files, zip files, rar files, arj files, bitmap images and jpegs.

      Some people just need an installer which only has a "Yes" button on it.

    65. Re:Train wreck indeed by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      What's that got to do with the fact that there is an Windows 3 dialog sitting there? It's irrelevant whether it's necessary to use it, it's still there, untouched by anyone for 15 years. Completely breaking all the user interface conventions of the last 5 or so versions of Windows.

    66. Re:Train wreck indeed by phrasebook · · Score: 1

      they have to offer something truly innovative and useful

      No they don't. That's the problem.

    67. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its spelt amateur dickfuck

    68. Re:Train wreck indeed by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      For example, Expose was the big hit of Panther

      Yeah, a great innovation. First you just have to disgard the perfectly fine task-switching from OS and replace it with a huge taskbar knock-off filled with amorphous, textless icons to create an interface that only looks good when you're standing on a podium in front of 300 people. Then when you finally come out with something halfway sensible, it will appear that much better in comparison. Rule 1 to being cute: keep an ugly friend nearby.

      Expose is like "Coke Classic" following on "New Coke"- they screwed up the previous release so badly, that anything different at all seems like a godsend.

    69. Re:Train wreck indeed by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      No, icon zooming is a bad idea. Things shouldn't move around like that, it makes the system harder to use.

      Icon zooming doesn't have to move anything around. It merely provides an enlarged picture of the icon as a kind of faster tooltip hint as to what you're about to click on. That picture is not itself sensitive to clicking, so it doesn't effectively move anything. The only role it serves is to reduce errors when going to click on a small icon, because an accidental mis-aim will be revealed before you actually wait for the whole application to come up.

      Icon zooming in general should not be confused with the bad implementation of icon magnification in the Macintosh Dock, which does in fact move things around, and is bad like you said.

    70. Re:Train wreck indeed by TeknoHog · · Score: 1
      XP had the desert dunes wallpaper as default in the beta but switched to the grassy hills wallpaper for the release.

      s/hills/knolls

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    71. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Retread? Ummm, this is a ground up rewrite. And if you bothered to read anything about Longhorn, they have several times said that the current UI theme is NOT the version that will appear in the final release.

      The parent is just spreading FUD and ignorant rantings.

    72. Re:Train wreck indeed by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      Worse, it's uglier than KDE with default theme. Now that is quite an achievement! And look at those horrible fonts... I really have no words here. To me, one good thing about Windows always was availability of nice screen fonts (how many of you have 'Web core fonts' installed on your Linux machines?). I never liked Bitstream Vera, which seems to be the default in most Linux distro nowadays, but what's on these screenshots is much, much worse.

      By the way, I can't see the sidebar anywhere. Gone the way of WinFS?

    73. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, there's something wron heere. When i try to click the answer ro this spot, there is no link to click on. There also seams to be some problemn with the date on that post...... should i contact an editor to sort this out...?

    74. Re:Train wreck indeed by nick8325 · · Score: 1, Informative

      That doesn't change the fact that there's a creaky old dialog box not hidden away at all and which you are encouraged to use to install fonts. It shows a lack of attention to detail that this dialog has never been replaced.

      Anyway, if you drag a font into the Fonts folder, the second half of the 3.x dialog appears to install it.

      Incidentally, the font folder doesn't (now that I've played with it a bit) behave properly as a shell folder. For example, dragging fonts to the Recycle Bin is ignored. It should behave consistently when doing this.

      And since when do you install apps by dragging them off a CD? Last time I checked the logo certification required you to use a .MSI file - definitely no drag and drop there.

    75. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      But if they see that there is a good reason to upgrade, they will.

      No they won't. No sane person, and only a tiny percentage of insane ones, is going to install a new release of Windows on a working machine. By now, the world has sufficient accrued knowledge to avoid replacing a working OS with anything other than

      (a) The exact same version of Windows that was on it before it was connected to ADSL

      (b) Something that has never been anywhere near Redmond.

      It can take n months to get a different verison of Windows to run at all, and when it does, half your hardware, and most of your apps won't work. And if you call in a nerd, he will call you rude names, and replace it win Penguine 9.8.1 anyway.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    76. Re:Train wreck indeed by aaronl · · Score: 1

      I see your difference, and that is better than my first impression. Still, doesn't zooming the icon interfere with your access to icons behind the edges of the zoomed one? (Or we're typing about two different things... ;-)

    77. Re:Train wreck indeed by dascandy · · Score: 1

      > Windows 2000 can do just about anything a user wants, it can play DVD movies, surf the web, play games. Why do we need a new version of Windows?

      The least you could do is upgrade the comment every three years or so, to compare $NEW_WINDOWS_VERSION with $CURRENT_WINDOWS_VERSION.

    78. Re:Train wreck indeed by jbolden · · Score: 1

      amorphous, textless icons to create an interface that only looks good when you're standing on a podium in front of 300 people

      Not sure if you are trolling but if not...

      System Preferences->Dock
      Click Magnification and set it to Max.
      You'll be able to see your icons fine. You'll be able to see what's on minimized browsers. You'll be able to see which emails you kept open....

    79. Re:Train wreck indeed by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      People queued up to get the new version because the existing versions were horrendously unstable, and they hoped for something remotely useable.. Since 2000 it's become stable enough that it's actually useable, unlike the previous versions which were totally unfit for anything.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    80. Re:Train wreck indeed by mav[LAG] · · Score: 1

      This page is very helpful - how to install a binary version of mplayer in 32-bit mode that will use the 32-bit codecs. I've been running 32-bit mplayer on AMD64 for quite some time now and it plays .wmv files fine.

      --
      --- Hot Shot City is particularly good.
    81. Re:Train wreck indeed by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Which means you have to waste your diskspace and ram having all the backwards compatibility libs there, not to mention the reduction in performance from using 32bit libs.. Closed source crap is massively holding back the progression of hardware, and something should be done about it! I miss the days when everything came with source..
      Theres no reason why you can't sell commercial software WITH sourcecode under a restrictive license, something like saying any patches to the code belong to the company who sold it in the first place, and cannot be distributed except to registered users of the original. That way we could have "unsupported" ports to other platforms available, a good source of addons/patches and bugfixes etc, and anything they dont want to support they dont have to, but those of us who want to could port to new platforms etc..
      If the original company wants to port their app to a new platform, chances are a lot of the work will already be done and all they need to do is start supporting it.
      And finally, if a company decides to stop selling a product, it could become community supported and gather a lot of goodwill aswell as a guaranteed continuing support path for users.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    82. Re:Train wreck indeed by MemoryDragon · · Score: 1

      Add to that, Core Audio, Core Video, Core Data, Dashboard, Xcode2 and the Automator....

    83. Re:Train wreck indeed by TractorBarry · · Score: 1

      Ho ho.

      Well the first thing I did with the wretched XP machine they gave me at work was to install Blackbox for Windows. Plus some wallpaer from Deviant Art

      Not only does it make the machine pleasant to use but it confuses the hell out of my colleagues :)

      --
      Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
    84. Re:Train wreck indeed by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Click Magnification and set it to Max.
      You'll be able to see your icons fine. You'll be able to see what's on minimized browsers. You'll be able to see which emails you kept open....


      Hurray! If I make the Dock incredibly huge, I can actually sometimes tell what icons mean. So what that I don't have space for actual applications anymore...

      If the Dock could be moved to the left or right edge of the screen, then it wouldn't matter so much. Taking 256 pixels from the bottom row of a widescreen monitor is much worse than using the same space from the side. But NO, the Dock can't be moved.

      The Dock gives you three fine choices:
      1. Tiny icons that tell you nothing.
      2. Huge icons that show little thumbnails, which waste tons of screen space.
      3. Small icons which balloon into big ones when you go nearby, causing all the icons to shove around so they're harder to click on.

    85. Re:Train wreck indeed by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I find it impossible to believe that any UI could be uglier than XP

      You apparently have never seen Xaw. It truly makes WinXP look like real art.
      (Fortunately, I only know of one application that still uses the Xaw widgets,
      and it's an app that end users, as a general rule, won't touch anyway.)

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    86. Re:Train wreck indeed by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

      Rush just covered that track on "Feedback". Primo.

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    87. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. And if you click on the sideways folder, Windows scatters it's contents randomly all over your hard drive.

    88. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hurray! If I make the Dock incredibly huge, I can actually sometimes tell what icons mean. So what that I don't have space for actual applications anymore...

      Magnification only shows icons at full size if you hover over them. They will stay in whatever smaller size you want, if your mouse is anywhere else on the desktop.

      If the Dock could be moved to the left or right edge of the screen, then it wouldn't matter so much. Taking 256 pixels from the bottom row of a widescreen monitor is much worse than using the same space from the side. But NO, the Dock can't be moved.

      The dock can be set up to display at the left or right site of the screen.
      Have a look at the Dock Preferences...

    89. Re:Train wreck indeed by wakdjunkaga · · Score: 2, Informative

      What MS needs to do is completely forget their notion of what a GUI should look like, and listen to people who use computers, and people who understand how to interact with information (Edward Tufte comes to mind).

      Long filenames are better than 8x3, but why squander characters uselessly? "C:\Documents and Settings\Owner\My Documents" comes to mind ...

      Why default to having filename extensions turned off? Is giving the 'type' field "Microsoft Powerpoint Presentation" and hiding the extension really better than showing the ".PPT" extension?

      What in the world was on their minds when conceiving the 'improved' file search functions in XP's Explorer? This UI is just plain wrong ...

      If you double-click on an unknown file type Explorer now defaults to a web search to find what program is likely to open it by generating a URL like this one ...
      http://shell.windows.com/fileassoc/0409/xml/r edir. asp?Ext=0rb

      Problem is, if Firefox is the default browser then this doesn't do anything (haven't tried it with Opera or others, so don't know if only IE will work, but kinda suspect this is the case).

      Part two of this is, if you choose the other option - "Select the program from a list" - then the next dialog box *still* defaults to "Always use the selected program to open this kind of file". I don't know how many times I've had to "fix" someone's computer where they didn't have the required program installed, said, "Yes" here, and related, for instance, a PDF file to open with "America Online".

      Why have error messages become even more cryptic over the years? Why is it the embedded help is next to useless? Even DOS commands have the "HELP command" or "command /?" forms; why do I need to scour the web to learn what command switches work with Windows programs like Explorer? Would it have freak'n killed someone to add these more 'advanced' topics to the help system?

      Why was it a good idea to 'integrate' IE into the OS? In IE v3 and earlier if I linked to a XLS worksheet the browser would open an instance of the program associated to that extension (Excel, in this case), and the user would get full usability.

      In IE v4 and later the viewer that renders XLS file strips out Excel's print formatting capability and gives me the browser's much weaker one (I know - there are ways around it, but why take something simple, and useful, then transform it to a more complex and less useful entity)?

      Why... why ... aghh ... burble ... aw, sorry 'bout that, my head just exploded. Gotta go clean it up now ;)

    90. Re:Train wreck indeed by creysoft · · Score: 1

      If the Dock could be moved to the left or right edge of the screen, then it wouldn't matter so much. Taking 256 pixels from the bottom row of a widescreen monitor is much worse than using the same space from the side. But NO, the Dock can't be moved.

      Eh wot, now? Go to Apple->Dock-> and you can position the dock on the left, bottom, or right. Either you don't do much exploring, or you haven't used a Mac in a long time.

      --
      Formerly GNU/Anonymous Coward. This message has been determined to cause cancer in laboratory animals.
    91. Re:Train wreck indeed by jbolden · · Score: 1

      3. Small icons which balloon into big ones when you go nearby, causing all the icons to shove around so they're harder to click on.

      Try an experiment. Come at an icon with high magnification from any position. The magnified icon will be at the position that the small icon was. That's why the dock "bends" when you move over icons so that this property is preserved.

      The moving icons "out of the way" is an illusion. The other icons appear to move out of the way to make it easier to hit the one you are aiming at. That's very good user interface, the thing you want to use is large and easy to click stuff you don't want to click is small and but still visable. If you are exploring a lot of minimized windows you just shift over and the whole visual picture changes.

      If the Dock could be moved to the left or right edge of the screen, then it wouldn't matter so much.

      System Preferences->Dock->"Position on screen"
      lists both left and right as options.

      System Preferences->Dock->"Automatically hide and show the dock"
      prevents the dock from blocking applications.

      I think you should appologize to Apple. That's 3 times now you've claimed their product doesn't do something which it not only does but that the even the smallest attempt to verify would have disproven.

    92. Re:Train wreck indeed by cp.tar · · Score: 1
      "For example, XP had the desert dunes wallpaper as default in the beta but switched to the grassy hills wallpaper for the release."

      Uh huh. Quite the paradigm shift, there.

      Quite so: from Arrakis to Teletubbies.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    93. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead of the default shades of blue in WinXP, imagine dull and dreary shades of grey and you'll be close to the color scheme showin in the Longhorn pics.

      So they've copied Apple again? OS X used to be cheerful, but they've toned Aqua down with every version, so now Aqua is basically grey, and the "professional" skin is dull white, and "brushed metal" is yet more grey...

      I bet the next iMac will be kind of square, and the advertising campain will run "Beige is the new Bondi Blue!"

    94. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What MS needs to do is completely forget their notion of what a GUI should look like, and listen to people who use computers, and people who understand how to interact with information.

      They did. That's why Windows has been getting more and more Mac-like.

      For example, hiding filename extensions? Right out of pre-OS X MacOS.

      Long filenames are better than 8x3, but why squander characters uselessly? "C:\Documents and Settings\Owner\My Documents" comes to mind ...

      The average user never sees that; he just sees "My Documents".

      Any advanced user browsing the actual file tree will either be using a graphical browser, in which case he won't care how long the names are, or will be in the command prompt, in which case he's going to be clued-up enough to have turned on tab-completion and therefore won't care how long the names are.

    95. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the Dock could be moved to the left or right edge of the screen, then it wouldn't matter so much.

      Move it, then.

      Taking 256 pixels from the bottom row of a widescreen monitor is much worse than using the same space from the side.

      I quite agree.

      But NO, the Dock can't be moved.

      Oh yes it can.

    96. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are trying to follow Apple's "glass" looking themes.

      What "glass" themes? The themes I see on my Mac fall into two categories - the ones that look like plastic (Aqua and the not-quite-Aqua one XCode uses), and the ones that look like metal. Neither looks at all like the glassy effect I can see in those Longhorn shots.

    97. Re:Train wreck indeed by kelzer · · Score: 1

      AD is a directory made useful far beyond bare-bones LDAP, and with more fully realized utility than NDS.

      Let me apologize in advance for veering off-topic here, but I gotta call you out on this one.

      After spending the last 3 months working on building an LDAP-based user-provisioning system for AD, I could write a book about everything that's wrong with it.

      • First, the whole thing is still based on the legacy NT domain model. If you have a forrest of multiple domains, you need trusts between them in order for a user in one domain to access resources in another. And technically, each domain is a separate directory.
      • The Global Catalog is basically just a hack to try to address the fact that there isn't really a single directory. But it's read-only, and just contains a subset of attributes.
      • There's no concept of partitioning the directory (other than by using domains). So if you have a widely distributed directory, you either need a lot of WAN bandwidth for replication, or you need lots of individual domains.
      • Microsoft strongly discourages extending the AD schema - so much so that they came out with AD/AM - Active Directory / Application Mode - for use by custom applications, so as to avoid extending production Active Directory deployments. Furthermore, there's no way to remove a class or attribute from AD once you've added them - you can only disable them.
      • Group Policies aren't stored in the directory - they're stored in the filesystem (the directory just contains UNC paths to the files).
      • AD will only listen for LDAP traffic on 389, or secure LDAP on 636. You can't choose any other ports.
      • By default, AD listens for unencrypted LDAP on port 389, and allows authentication on that port. What's funny is that you can't use port 389 to change a user's password (for security reasons) but AD will let you bind as "Administrator" on that port without complaint, having allowed you to pass the Administrator password across the network with no SSL or TLS.
      • AD's LDAP error messages are horrible. In general, they're not very descriptive of the real problem. Other LDAP implementations provide error messages that are meaningful enough to pass back to the user.
      • AD requires the use of Windows DNS, and does some non-standard things so that LDAP referrals often won't work correctly unless the LDAP client uses the same DNS servers.
      • By default, LDAP sessions time out after a few minutes. So if you're browsing the directory using some generic LDAP tool and you're idle for a few minutes, when you then try to examine something you find you've been disconnected. My guess is they added this because so many developers are incapable of closing connections when they're done.
      --

      ---------------------------------------------
      SERENITY NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    98. Re:Train wreck indeed by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      The magnified icon will be at the position that the small icon was. That's why the dock "bends" when you move over icons so that this property is preserved.

      Yes, that one icon will stay in the same place. All the others to the left and right of it WILL MOVE. That means that when I move the mouse off this icon to go click on one of them, it will be somewhere else by the time my cursor gets there.

      System Preferences->Dock->"Position on screen"

      That still leaves it centered on that edge, not bound to either side. And that means that the buttons you click on to launch applications (or the trash icon) will move around according to how many programs you currently have running. That means you can't blindly aim the mouse someplace near the corner of the screen and hit a program you want (that's called "muscle memory")- you must stop, look at where the icons have gone based on how much is running, and adjust your aim.

    99. Re:Train wreck indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those who own a 1934 Ford coupe are also paying a bunch of money for custom stuff made by small companies.

      I can not speak for a 1934 Ford but I can buy parts (engine parts, body parts, interior parts etc..) for my 1970 Mustang far cheaper then I can for my 2003 Dodge minivan or my 2004 Hyundai Elantra..
      An example, Alternator for my 70 Mustang - $45, my minivan - $175, Elantra - $245. How about a radiator? Mustang $99, minivan $280, Elantra $350.

      The large open market "aftermarket" makes the price cheaper, not more expensive.

    100. Re:Train wreck indeed by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > By the time Longhorn is actually released, Windows 2000 will be 6 -
      > going on 7 - years old.

      I wouldn't put money on any number smaller than 8. It *could* come out in
      2006, as is currently projected, but I don't recommend holding your breath.
      Remember that 2006 is already at least the second year it's been pushed back
      to, after having been previously scheduled to come out in an earlier year.
      The *strongest* argument for a 2006 release date's being realistic is the
      leaked-beta screenshots that have been seen around the web on several
      occasions in 2004 and 2005, but going from leaked-screenshot stage to
      production can take (and sometimes has taken, at various times for various
      companies with various products) significantly more time than planned.

      Granted, I'm an acknowledge pessimist. I'm not saying it *can't* come out
      in 2006, or that it *necessarily* won't; I'm just saying, don't make your
      life's plans around it at this point.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  3. Shut Do! by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 4, Funny
    "Shut Do..."? What the heck is that? Have they decided to bring Microsoft Bob back as a plucky caveman named "Shut" or something?

    (On a serious note, it'd probably be a good idea to fix that--otherwise, grandma's gonna have a hard time figuring out what the "Shu..." button does on her large-text setup...)

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    1. Re:Shut Do! by fizban · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's the Homer mode you see there. "Shut.. Doh!"

      --

      +1 Insightful, -1 Troll. What can I say, I'm an Insightful Troll.

    2. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good heavens, no. They've gone from the stupid double "V" on menus to truncating the individual items? Please no. Does MS have a whole "time/space-saving feature that is actually annoying" development division?

      The last thing needed is more stupid defaults to turn off.

    3. Re:Shut Do! by crivens · · Score: 1

      I was just about to post the same thing. How stupid can Microsoft possibly be? This is just poor UI design, though we know Microsoft aren't renowned for the design prowess.

    4. Re:Shut Do! by Storlek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      grandma's gonna have a hard time figuring out what the "Shu..." button does on her large-text setup
      It starts a game of shuffleboard, of course.

      What I'd like to know is, have they done anything to make the actual shutdown dialog more useful? The button icons completely fail to depict what they're supposed to be. I had to use a Spanish computer one time and couldn't figure out how to turn it off. I'd never used Windows XP before, and those buttons are absolutely meaningless without the text underneath them.

      --
      Bears don't normally eat things that talk and move backwards.
    5. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the bright side, the color does make sense to those who are familiar with the green/yellow/red traffic lights in the US & other things which have adopted this scheme (green=go=restart, yellow=yield=standby, red=stop=shutdown)

    6. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Normally I would let minor UI over sights go, but you're right... WTF is up with "Shut Do..."? Heck, XP could fit the phrase "Turn Off Computer" without trimming the phrase.

    7. Re:Shut Do! by kpat154 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Because, of course, it's Microsoft fault you can't read Spanish.

    8. Re:Shut Do! by R.Mo_Robert · · Score: 1

      I thought the icons were actually supposed to help people by being different colors with international meanings: yellow is a neutral action because you can always wake up from sleep, green is a "go" action because it'll make your computer restart, and red is a more serious action because it shuts off your computer. (And I'm partially colorblind. But I can still read the text, so I don't see how this is a problem. And if you're like a lot of geeks, the Welcome Screen is turned off, which has also happens to make it so the Shut Down dialog is like that of Windows 2000.)

      That, and Microsoft is probably counting on the fact that if you're using a Spanish copy of XP, you know Spanish. The icons aren't going to do everything for you. That said, they still make sense to me.

      --
      R.Mo
    9. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the on and off buttons happen to be the universal symbols for "power on" and "power off" respectively. You aren't that dense are you? Why are Linux users suddenly so clueless when on Windows? Talk about product lock-in.

    10. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      universal symbols

      Sorry, but they aren't.

    11. Re:Shut Do! by xtracto · · Score: 1

      Darn I would mod you down to hell... the point is Those squares with funny symbols do not represent a fucking thing, if you erase the words then they do not show the function the ICON represent... do you understand? it is called Graphic Design, there are some Bachellors degrees about that.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    12. Re:Shut Do! by DroopyStonx · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's just because I have a brain, but honestly there's nothing wrong w/ the icons.

      It should be common sense that a big red icon means "shutdown" or the green one means restart, considering the same colors are used on similar buttons on most other things...

      --
      We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
    13. Re:Shut Do! by Clueless+Moron · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Standard? I do recognize the broken circle with a line through its circumference as a "power" button, because I have many devices with that.

      But note: when a device is off, and I press the button with that icon, it turns on. Conversely, if the device is already on, pressing it turns it off.

      So, now here I am presented with what seems to be a power button, on a device that is currently on. So pressing it should logically turn it OFF.

      Except, hey, WTF, why is it yellow? And what's that weird red thing next to it? I have searched through my entire house, and I haven't found a single device with that icon on it. On the other hand, I've found paired on/off buttons where a single line (|) means on, and a circle (o) means off. I've always understood those to be switches dedicated to on or off, and the combined broken circle one to be a toggle.

      So hell, now I don't know what to do. Well, that happy looking green thing looks to me like it must be a lively "just keep things on please" button, so I'll consider that a cancel button and press that.

      Whoops.

    14. Re:Shut Do! by SunFan · · Score: 1


      What is so suprising is that Longhorn has been under development for so long, and it still has this sort of obvious UI problem.

      I wonder if Microsoft has reached a critical mass, where they simply cannot finish Longhorn at all. There are lots of projects out there (e.g., The Big Dig, etc.) that for whatever reasons simply never die.

      --
      -- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
    15. Re:Shut Do! by Storlek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, sorry. You've very likely seen the text and therefore know what the buttons mean. It has nothing to do with your brain.

      And: name one device with a button that has a bunch of lines organized in a circle meaning "restart". A better icon for restart might have been something like a web browser's reload button, or maybe the "recycle" logo.

      I couldn't figure out the difference between the red and yellow buttons. The icons are nearly identical, and with my experience with 'nix window managers, I figured that perhaps one of the buttons saved what programs were running before logging out, and the other one didn't... but then what would the green lines-in-a-circle mean? I couldn't think of reasonable meanings for all three buttons, so how could I be sure that any interpretation I had for one or two of them was correct?

      Consider another common association: red means "incorrect" and green means "correct." So maybe the green button means "yes, I want to shut down the computer" and the red one means "never mind"? There's just way too much room for ambiguity, and besides, if the icons are so poorly designed that the only way to tell the buttons apart is by the color, they fail to be useful.

      --
      Bears don't normally eat things that talk and move backwards.
    16. Re:Shut Do! by Apocros · · Score: 1

      "Except, hey, WTF, why is it yellow? And what's that weird red thing next to it? I have searched through my entire house, and I haven't found a single device with that icon on it. On the other hand, I've found paired on/off buttons where a single line (|) means on, and a circle (o) means off. I've always understood those to be switches dedicated to on or off, and the combined broken circle one to be a toggle."

      i was just about to agree with this and chime in with a "me too!", but then i noticed that my monitor has the circle/line combo button... i'd never really noticed that until just now.

      --
      "onward!" cried the copper man, little knowing brass corrupts...
    17. Re:Shut Do! by klui · · Score: 1

      Damn straight it's their fault! Their fault I lost money in the .com bust, too.

    18. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Ah! So clicking the yellow button turns off the monitor!

      Must be one of those energy saving features.

    19. Re:Shut Do! by jcr · · Score: 1

      I wonder if Microsoft has reached a critical mass, where they simply cannot finish Longhorn at all.

      It may well be that Longhorn is, quite simply, overfunded.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    20. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exercise: Read this description of cognitive dissonance. Then try to read the parent post again...with a straight face. GL.

    21. Re:Shut Do! by tesmako · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They also suck since it is near-impossible to see which button has keyboard focus, instead of the regular dotted rectangle used in the rest of Windows they have a slight lighter tint when active. Real easy to tell. I end up having to switch focus a few times before pressing enter every time just to be sure that the button I want is the active one.

    22. Re:Shut Do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That'll be just like the way Green means "On" and Red means "Off", right around the world, does it?

      Except of course in those cultures where Red and Green have totally different meanings. Which makes those icons even more meaningless.

    23. Re:Shut Do! by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      On the other hand, I've found paired on/off buttons where a single line (|) means on, and a circle (o) means off.

      In certain technical forums, those are referred to as "one" and "zero".

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    24. Re:Shut Do! by Altus · · Score: 1



      If you are in fact color blind then you should know that color should absolutely be avoided as a means of conveying information in a user interface. it becomes a problem for people who cant differentiate.... this is UI design 101 stuff.

      Sure... you can still read the words, but in that case, why have the icons at all. Why not just have clickable buttons with the words in them... hell you could still color them if you really want, secure in the knowledge that the words provide enough information.

      If the icons are going to be there, they should be there for a reason. They should convey information, not just take up space. This is true for every interface that is designed... not just the shutdown dialog... and it is a huge problem throughout microsoft software (and software from other windows developers who take their cues from microsoft)

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    25. Re:Shut Do! by DroopyStonx · · Score: 1

      Hahaha dude, it's not rocket science... c'mon.

      --
      We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
    26. Re:Shut Do! by SunFan · · Score: 1


      Yes, being overfunded can be a fundamental problem in projects just like being underfunded. It promotes waste, it diffuses management focus, and it can create a "we can do it all" mentality, even though projects scale non-linearly.

      --
      -- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
    27. Re:Shut Do! by R.Mo_Robert · · Score: 1

      If you are in fact color blind then you should know that color should absolutely be avoided as a means of conveying information in a user interface. it becomes a problem for people who cant differentiate.... this is UI design 101 stuff.

      Color should not be the only way of conveying information in a UI. Using it to enhance is fine.

      --
      R.Mo
    28. Re:Shut Do! by blew_fantom · · Score: 1

      you forgot to mention color-blind people. red and green wouldn't mean a darn thing to them. it would be impossible for them to tell which button is which based on color alone. nevermind if you are using windows XP in japanese or something and you have no clue what the text is saying either...

    29. Re:Shut Do! by jcr · · Score: 1

      I think it's fair to say that overfunding is what ultimately sunk Copeland. The initial plan for Copeland was very ambitious, and it just kept getting piled on. It was a very expensive lesson, but today Apple puts some serious thought into what any product should, and shouldn't do.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  4. Beta by McGiraf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well it's still in beta, and a long way to release so a lot can change.

    1. Re:Beta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That isn't a troll, it's a very fair point. Please mod appropriately.

    2. Re:Beta by Rosyna · · Score: 0

      No, it isn't in beta yet. It hasn't reached beta status yet.

    3. Re:Beta by MKalus · · Score: 1

      Beta should mean that they have all the features in and are now bug hunting trying to optimize the code before shipping. The "look and feel" and the featureset should be completed by now.

      --
      If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
    4. Re:Beta by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Well the software projects I worked on changed a lot from beta to to release, but then again it was smaller companies than microsoft and smaller projects than windows.

    5. Re:Beta by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

      Maybe a lot can change, but that would just lead to MORE bugs. If it's been so many years and it reaches "beta" status, there shouldn't be major changes. You want it to look better, try bb4win.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
    6. Re:Beta by Flyboy+Connor · · Score: 1

      But Microsoft is notorious for releasing betas as the final product...

    7. Re:Beta by BrainSurgeon · · Score: 0

      This has to been MOST intelligent thing I have very read on slashdot!!

      I'm not being a smartass either. A lot of people are quick to bash Microsoft because it's Microsoft!

      --
      "It's not rocket science, Smithers! It's only brain surgery!" --Mr. Burns
    8. Re:Beta by xtracto · · Score: 1

      I would love to see what would people say if they released the final version of windows as Longhorn BETA?? I am sure a lot of people from /. would shout and cry so much, but it is exactly what Google is doing isn't it??

      It could stay on Beta for 1 or 2 years, then release the 1st service pack and change the status to "Beta 2" and then release another SP after 2 years and change it to "Final" and then release something else.

      Do you know what pisses me off about Windows... every new OS they develop is exactly that a NEW OS, (or even if it is not...) so it is said that you can "upgrade" from 95 to 98 or 98 to ME or ME to XP (or XP to Longhorn??) but, I had tried to do some of those upgrades and in my experience none of them where smooth, at the end you finished with a 2 times more bloated SO and I had to reinstall again in another partition...

      I think that is one of the good things about [SOME] linux distros, (I think about gentoo) once you have it installed, you just have to do some steps (which SHOULD be reduced to click a button IMHO) and you have the new X.0.0 version...

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    9. Re:Beta by jericho4.0 · · Score: 1

      Google is free.

      --
      "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    10. Re:Beta by JohnsonWax · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is that on 4/26/2004, 4/26/2003, and 4/26/2002, the very same thing could be said, and it appears it will be true on 2/26/2006 as well.

      I'm sure Apple frequently uttered those very words with Copeland.

    11. Re:Beta by MKalus · · Score: 1

      Oh don't get me wrong. I wouldn't be too surprised if this is what is going to happen, but if you do follow a software development methodology once a product hits beta it should be bug hunting only and not writing new code and causing more bugs.

      Now, that's the "gold" standard, but any company I've been in what is "good" and makes sense usually is not what is being done.

      --
      If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
    12. Re:Beta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who mod parent insightful?! Anybody who used PC long enough to remembered a few previous windows versions (most notably NT and 95) can recall that this is exactly what has happened before. MS will claim a low miminum required RAM, then the beta turns out really to need 2-3x RAM to run acceptably, and MS apologist will say this:

      Well it's still in beta, and a long way to release so a lot can change.

      But of course, everytime it turns out that it really need that much RAM. And then those apologist will say the new "features" are worth the extra RAM.

  5. Pre beta review by Joe+U · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wow, a pre-beta release that isn't feature complete has 'the makings a train wreck'.

    Give me a break, it's not even considered beta 1.

    It's like complaining about interior design of an unbuilt house.

    'OMG, I didn't want open walls and exposed wires! I wanted green wallpaper.'

    1. Re:Pre beta review by Rodness · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On the other hand, since they seem to have be pushing most of the important bits forward to release them for XP because of the delays in the Longhorn schedule, I'm just not at all surprised that their screenshots look like XP with a new coat of paint.

      I really don't know what else they can do that's going to be terrifically revolutionary other than under the hood improvements. And they're being very tight lipped about those (what a shock).

      I'm just glad that I heard somewhere (I think it was a cnet article in the last couple weeks) that they're going to improve the ability for laptops to be members of multiple domains. That's a big plus...

      But the graphical crap? Most people are going to disable it to try(!) to minimize the resources that windows sucks so that they might actually have cpu cycles for tasks instead of eye candy.

    2. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, at least it's not a mac or a linux, talk about a software (both) / hardware (linux)compatability trainwreck.

    3. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'OMG, I didn't want open walls and exposed wires! I wanted green wallpaper.'

      I think it's more like, "Why are all those junction boxes concealed in the walls?"

    4. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh.

      Think about what you just posted. Then think about what kind of fool you just made yourself out to be.

      Never fails to amaze me--honestly. The little baby voice was a nice touch, I must add.

      On a more serious note: what if a "respected" site/magazine reviewed the latest alpha version of and said that it was a, "trainwreck that smelled of festering shit." I bet your comment(s) would be a tiny bit different.

      So, in turn, next time you decide to rattle off something as completly arrogant as you just did, think twice, fanboy.

    5. Re:Pre beta review by Joe+U · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would be very suprised if the shell was a high priority in beta 1, especially when they are changing the graphics subsystem and parts of the file system.

      You can't go and toss up a new shell using new technology that hasn't been designed yet. Wait till RC1 to review.

    6. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoops.

      There was supposed to be a "[insert favorite distro here]" between "of and".

    7. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bzzt!

      http://www.apple.com/macosx/

      PS. Tell your virus software I said hi!

    8. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pardon the interruption, but I've never used a virus scanner/firewall with Windows XP/Windows 2000.

      OpenBSD (as a firewall/router) and some general common sense (while security Windows) can go a long way.

    9. Re:Pre beta review by BandwidthHog · · Score: 4, Funny

      I've never used a virus scanner/firewall with Windows XP/Windows 2000.

      And that's why I just sent those pictures you took after school last Tuesday to your parents. I thought sending them from your Gmail account was a nice touch, didn't you, Bob? Only time will tell if your sister ever forgives you for stealing her panties.

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    10. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask any Mac or Linux fan, Windows users are not supposed to have common sense.

      They are supposed to run their system into the ground while blaming the bad 'm$' for letting them do it.

      I blame my car company for letting me drive the car into a wall. They should have a warning about that.

    11. Re:Pre beta review by Rei · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As someone who runs Linux "development" versions (currently using FC4T2) and even runs unfinished software downloaded CVS at times, all I can say is, "I expect more from a preview version".

      Seriously - you take prereleases so you can play with all of the neat new features; the downside is that you have to deal with the nasty new bugs. Something is wrong with this beta if you don't get new features... :P

      --
      Are there any deer in the theater tonight? Get 'em up against the wall.
    12. Re:Pre beta review by daviddennis · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It does seem interesting that they've been shedding features, seemingly backing off from most of the things that were supposed to make Longhorn special. In the mean time, Apple's powering along and giving Mac users exactly what was promised in versions of MacOS X. I think that's a bad sign by any standard.

      Another bad sign is that they claimed that it would be finished in mid-2006 and now it's "holiday" 2006. So in theory they might release December 24th now.

      As I remember them, betas of MacOS X were feature-complete but very slow, and then speeds improved as the release got closer. I wouldn't expect enough changes in the interface to make it less than disappointing to these reviewers.

      Those indications make me feel the Longhorn project is in deep trouble.

      *

      I worked in a job when I had to support mainstream (non-computer people) with Windows systems.

      Most of them seemed to like the Windows XP interface better because it was more cheerful. In fact, a few of them even liked Hotbar and didn't appreciate my suggestion to improve their slug-like performance by removing it. It was, after all, pretty.

      So don't expect that everyone acts like a geek and removes it. I'm a pretty hardcore geek myself and even I prefer XP's interface to Windows 2000's gray Depression City.

      Of course I prefer MacOS X to either, but you get the idea.

      D

    13. Re:Pre beta review by periol · · Score: 1

      Wait till RC1 to review. That's a great idea if you don't ever intend to use the product. The whole point of beta releases is to figure out problems, iron out difficulties, and help develop the software towards release. If you'll never use it, then wait. If you're going to use it, you might as well get your opinion in *early*, before everything gets set in stone.

    14. Re:Pre beta review by mechsoph · · Score: 1

      I would be very suprised if the shell was a high priority in beta 1, especially when they are changing the graphics subsystem and parts of the file system.

      You can't go and toss up a new shell using new technology that hasn't been designed yet


      I first thought "WTF does the graphics system have to do with the shell? All you need are the standard c library and a few basic syscalls that any undergrad should know, and that stuff surely shouldn't be changing now." Then I remembered that in Windows-land, shell means Desktop Environment.

      It's almost sad, really...

    15. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep pumping that MS party line clown.

      "It's not MS's shitty engineering, it's the stupid users!"

    16. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Wow, a pre-beta release that isn't feature complete has 'the makings a train wreck'.

      If Microsoft want to compare OS 10.4 with Longhorn as if Longhorn is a finished product, can you really blame everyone else for treating it the same way?

    17. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The early beta release is for the beta testers to figure out problems [etc...], not the general public.

      The public beta is when the general public should be involved.

      This is a developers preview, it's designed to get the backend working, it it specifically not ready for general review.

    18. Re:Pre beta review by diegocgteleline.es · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Paul has been following the Longhorn evolution for a couple of years. When he says "the makings a train wreck" he means that there has been basically ZERO evolution since the 2004 winhec.

      Not a surprise, it's know that 90% or more of the windows division spent its time working on SP2 until SP2 got released.

    19. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, definitions evolve, get over it.

      Shell: the material that forms the hard outer covering of some animals.

    20. Re:Pre beta review by Lars+T. · · Score: 1
      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    21. Re:Pre beta review by FLAGGR · · Score: 1

      -List an example of a program (besides games, windows wins there) that there isnt a counterpart for on *nix (since OSX can run linux apps)
      -Hardware on linux is much better on Linux than it is on Windows, where have you been the last 3 years? The only concievable issue with hardware is the REALLY obscure stuff, but otherwise drivers are fine, if not better on linux. If you took the supported hardware list of linux and XP, linux's would be much larger. Especially when you count legacy hardware (such as ISA stuff)

    22. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep showing that blind arrogance that makes the linux userbase so intelligent and mature.

    23. Re:Pre beta review by BandwidthHog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Those indications make me feel the Longhorn project is in deep trouble.

      I'm starting to think that they're at the same point Apple was at in the 90s: every attempt to build a modern successor to OS 9 from scratch crashed and burned horribly. They finally climbed up out of their grave by purchasing NeXT and turning NeXTstep into Mac OS X.

      How will MS tear themselves out of this cycle?

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    24. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS might want to drag OpenWave from HP out of the trashbin, or just buy some of the OS/2 UI pieces that worked really well from IBM.

    25. Re:Pre beta review by ir8monkey · · Score: 1

      By buying KDE!

    26. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What year did Microsoft start making this? Yes. So you see why people are nonplussed. This is atrocious. Even by Microsoft "standards".

    27. Re:Pre beta review by Total_Wimp · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I'm just glad that I heard somewhere (I think it was a cnet article in the last couple weeks) that they're going to improve the ability for laptops to be members of multiple domains. That's a big plus...

      ...only if it's easy to disable. The last thing I need is my users joining to another domain and getting a)the other domain's domain admins have Administrator rights over the laptop and b)all the logon scripts and group policy of the other domain are convieniently applied to their computer. Translation for all you Unix and NetWare admins out there:it's like hopping over to a client site and giving root on your laptop to their admins. Why would you want to do that?

      I have actually had end users join their laptops to the domains at client sites for one reason or another and my head started spinning around and smoke came shooting out of my ears. If they make this any easier I'll start doing flips in mid-air, I'm sure.

      Like I said, easy to turn off then no problem. Easier to turn on and I will cry.

    28. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >You can't go and toss up a new shell using new technology that hasn't been designed yet.

      Obviously you've never used the Enlightenment window manager.

    29. Re:Pre beta review by Phillup · · Score: 3, Funny

      How will MS tear themselves out of this cycle?

      They'll buy the remnants of Amiga and fsck it up so badly that not even the most rabid fan would ever touch it again.

      Then when they've had a good laugh, they'll get back to work and add another 128MB to the memory requirements.

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    30. Re:Pre beta review by aichpvee · · Score: 1

      And didn't microsoft just say that beta was good enough for production? So pre-beta can't be far behind.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    31. Re:Pre beta review by aCapitalist · · Score: 1

      In fact, it's not even Avalon-enabled yet. But what do you expect from glassy-eyed slashbots who like shiny objects.

    32. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, don't let your users join domains then. Simple enough to turn off.

    33. Re:Pre beta review by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Translation for all you Unix and NetWare admins out there:it's like hopping over to a client site and giving root on your laptop to their admins.

      Funny thing is, the first 3 releases of Mac OS X did exactly that. It even worked with Airport at Starbucks.

    34. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't been able to get Linux nor any Unix variant to work with the scroll "wheel" on my HP laptops touchpad.

    35. Re:Pre beta review by mrm677 · · Score: 1

      Pardon the interruption, but I've never used a virus scanner/firewall with Windows XP/Windows 2000.

      OpenBSD (as a firewall/router) and some general common sense (while security Windows) can go a long way.


      You are not alone. I use neither as well. But I'm not 100% foolproof. A couple years ago my DSL went down so I dialed up to my ISP using a modem. Of course my telephone modem wasn't connected to my DSL router/firewall and I got MS-Blaster within 10 minutes. But it was harmless and I removed it within another 5 minutes.

      So in the last 10 years, I've never lost any data due to viruses or trojans or whatever, I use Microsoft products, and I do not use any kind of anti-virus.

    36. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When he says "the makings a train wreck" he means that there has been basically ZERO evolution since the 2004 winhec.

      A really inaccurate analogy. Pedantically, a train wreck requires high speed before it can happen. If nothing's moving at all, it can hardly make a dramatic collision. He really doesn't mean a disaster, but a flop, downer, or expensive boondoggle.

    37. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How will MS tear themselves out of this cycle?

      Maybe they should set up a paypal account and put a tipjar on their website? If everyone donates some money and gives the developers some encouraging words maybe they'll do something really cool.

      [btw ...humor]

    38. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Real linux geeks use clit mice.

    39. Re:Pre beta review by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      If you have benn working with people that don't use a computer often, it is natural that they don't want to remove eye candy. But don't assume that only geeks want to remove them, that is not true. Casual users love eye candy, the other ones also like it but prefer usability.

    40. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      easy!!!!!!!!!!!!!! They'll buy BeOS from Palm

    41. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Not a surprise, it's know that 90% or more of the windows division spent its time working on SP2 until SP2 got released."

      Yes, certainly the fact that winXP code had major security issues to be dealt with came as complete surprise to Microsoft...

    42. Re:Pre beta review by Darth+Daver · · Score: 1

      Then what exactly are they trying to show off here?

    43. Re:Pre beta review by BandwidthHog · · Score: 1

      I use Microsoft products, and I do not use any kind of anti-virus.

      Aren't you the least bit curious as to what a scan would turn up?

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    44. Re:Pre beta review by djcatnip · · Score: 1

      Give me a break, it's not even considered beta 1.

      Maybe they should stop showing it off then? Otherwise, they deserve all the criticism they get from the public at large. They put that big M$ eyeball out there, I'm going to poke it.

      --
      I make these: http://beatseqr.com
    45. Re:Pre beta review by guuyuk · · Score: 1

      Another bad sign is that they claimed that it would be finished in mid-2006 and now it's "holiday" 2006. So in theory they might release December 24th now.

      I guess that they'll just have to cancel Christmas if they're not done...

      --
      We're sorry, the phone number you have reached is imaginary. Please rotate your phone 90 degrees and try your call again
    46. Re:Pre beta review by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      I'm sitting here at WinHEC and I don't hear anyone talking about OSX. A comparison at this point would be meaningless. I think it's Apple that wants to push the comparison. They always talk about MS at WWDC with posters and such. MS isn't doing that here at WinHEC.

    47. Re:Pre beta review by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 1

      If they weren't so all fired in a hurry to try and steal Apple's thunder, they'd have kept it under wraps a bit longer.
      This is their attempt to "look at me! look at me!" and then wondering why no one is looking. They should not try to out-market Apple right now. They can't.... Not with a pre-beta product compared to a mature OS in it's 4th major revision. That's not a slam against Microsoft, it's just their corporate culture blundering them into things that are going to under-whelm.

      "Look at our houseframe! It's TONS better than that completed mansion over there! No really!"

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
    48. Re:Pre beta review by supabeast! · · Score: 1

      "But the graphical crap? Most people are going to disable it to try(!) to minimize the resources that windows sucks so that they might actually have cpu cycles for tasks instead of eye candy."

      It's not likely that disabling eye-candy will have much of an effect on resources as most of processor itensive tricks will be dumped to the video card (Like Apple has been doing for the last year).

      I suspect that most of the CPU cycles will really being going to things like MSN Antivrius, MSN Antispyware, constant automatic update checking by the OS and every additional piece of installed software, constantly monitoring and tracking use of system resources for crash reports, and of course, trying to balance out the crazed abuse of system resources that will be the latest versions of Adobe's new Flashcrobat viewer.

    49. Re:Pre beta review by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      or Microsoft maybe could GEM Plus?

    50. Re:Pre beta review by child_of_mercy · · Score: 1

      Well in the media we keep hearing that new features in 10.4 will be in longhorn only "more robust".

      The difference being that one is here and the other is expensive vapour.

      --
      'There is a Light that never goes out.'
    51. Re:Pre beta review by jcr · · Score: 1

      Good question.. They already bought VMS and botched it. Be is long gone, so MS has pretty much eliminated their possible saviors. I'm sure it will be interesting to watch it all play out.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    52. Re:Pre beta review by JonXP · · Score: 1

      I have NEVER installed Linux and had all of any system's hardware work fine. I have yet to get Xinerama (using dual nVidia cards) to work. I rarely am able to get sound cards to work. I have at least two mainstream network cards that don't work, and one I can only get to work through patching. Modems are even more touch and go. I very rarely have a problem getting hardware to work in Windows, and if I do, it's usually a simple driver update to fix. But hey, linux is on my servers, and I don't need the video and sound for them. My desktop is a different story.

    53. Re:Pre beta review by dioscaido · · Score: 1

      Current builds have next to nothing of the new techonologies being built into Longhorn, except for a lot of the underlying kernel changes (which are not small, but not going to impress anyone other than OS people). Actually, last I heard the next beta was August, so I'm not sure where these people got their preview...

      I work on Longhorn networking, and I can say that Longhorn will have some awesome networking features not really available on linux or mac. But out bits won't make it into the build until the real Beta in August. So anyone running the current build would think that Longhorn networking will be the same as XP networking, which is pretty far from true.

      The same goes for Avalon, the new longohorn UI. The current UI is what you'll see when you opt out of Avalon, and even that may change in the next year before release.

      I know it really makes you guys feel great to believe that Longhorn will be a total disaster, but let's wait until actual oficial releases are out the door, and not leaked incomplete builds.

    54. Re:Pre beta review by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Well, since this was taken from WinHEC, I'm going to go out on a limb and say hardware and software compatibility with the kernel changes that have been made.

    55. Re:Pre beta review by MORB · · Score: 1

      I don't see what would be wrong with starting a new shell with the new technology, even if it's not finished.

      It actually would be a Good Thing, since it'd be a real-world app using the new technology that could let them figure out where the rough edges of the new technology are.

      It could also let them play around with the interface to experiment with new ideas and perhaps discover innovative and useful new things that could work.
      Problem is that microsoft has never been very strong in the creativity department, and they are not very good at usability either, which is why they seem to always copy and not really innovate.

    56. Re:Pre beta review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a registry key you can change to load the new shell and watch it crash.

      Considering it is still alpha quality, they disabled it by default.

    57. Re:Pre beta review by tbone1 · · Score: 1
      • Good question.. They already bought VMS and botched it. Be is long gone, so MS has pretty much eliminated their possible saviors. I'm sure it will be interesting to watch it all play out.

      They already have BSD's sockets; why not use FreeBSD, too? Heck, they copy everything else that Apple does ...

      --

      The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
    58. Re:Pre beta review by mrm677 · · Score: 1

      I did it once a year ago. Found nothing but false-positives. I then deinstalled.

    59. Re:Pre beta review by SteeldrivingJon · · Score: 1

      "Be is long gone, so MS has pretty much eliminated their possible saviors."

      Maybe Paul Allen needs to come back.

      --
      September 2011: Looking for Cocoa/iOS work in Boston area Cocoa Programmer Quincy, MA
    60. Re:Pre beta review by Tei · · Score: 1

      just change the theme, you can get desert, that its hot

      --

      -Woof woof woof!

    61. Re:Pre beta review by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about the false-positives? I've run a virus scanner for years, and false positives are rare. Mostly what I have seen is occasionally I'll pick up a virus that seem to be imbedded into html files - probably trying to exploit something in IE. Opera doesn't know what to do with them, so they are harmless to me.

  6. Why am I not surprised? by CrackedButter · · Score: 4, Funny

    The first screen shot is in monochrome, the original Macintosh had more shades of grey than this! :)

    1. Re:Why am I not surprised? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Well no, it was black and white :)

    2. Re:Why am I not surprised? by anynameleft · · Score: 1

      No, the original 1984 Macintosh did not have grayscale, only pure black and white. Additionally, it only had 512x384 pixels instead of the 640x480 the Longhorn boot screen has.

      Actually, even my SE/30, produced in 1990, only has 1 bit color.

    3. Re:Why am I not surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The SE/30's display could produce 256-level grayscale. You just needed the right hardware modifications.

    4. Re:Why am I not surprised? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      There's this really cool new thing now. All the kids are doing it. It's called "amusing hyperbole."

      You probably haven't heard about it because it's so new.

    5. Re:Why am I not surprised? by CrackedButter · · Score: 1

      No I havn't actually, what is hyperbole anyway?

    6. Re:Why am I not surprised? by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 1

      When I saw this I thought they where copying the Grey/Darker Grey boot screen apple gives you before the first part of panther loads.

  7. ummmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    backend first, frontend last - I wouldn't worry, they have a year or more.

    I've played with the 3DWM, it's fun.

    1. Re:ummmm by Storlek · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Considering the fact that the original betas of Mac OS X still looked quite a bit like a mixture of NeXT Rhapsody and the OS 8/9 style, and that changing the look of the UI is generally not all that difficult (heck, 3rd party apps can do it without even having any access to the source code) I wouldn't be surprised if the final version looks completely different from any current screenshots. Besides, they pulled a trick like that when XP came out; IIRC, all the beta screenshots just looked like Win2K.

      --
      Bears don't normally eat things that talk and move backwards.
  8. sarcasm by DarkHelmet · · Score: 5, Funny
    What is he talking about?

    No more Super Mario Land default theme! I'd say that's a step forward.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    1. Re:sarcasm by bwy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Does anybody else immediately write another IT person off as a bumbling, stupid idiot if he runs the default Luna theme on his desktop? I honestly don't see how anybody can do any serious work with that theme on.

    2. Re:sarcasm by Planesdragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      By, oh, ignoring the theme and focusing on the work?

      If you judge someone by their theme, then you really shouldn't be in IT.

    3. Re:sarcasm by croddy · · Score: 1

      actually, none of the IT people I work with run Windows. it's the KDE users we're writing off.

    4. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Due to the fact that we're using a powerful desktop as opposed to a crippled one?

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

      Extra Points for missing the joke.
      Some people just dont need no stinking desktop at all for efficient work.

    6. Re:sarcasm by bwy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Actually, I think there are problems so deep with the theme that they interfere with functionality. For example, window title bars consume too way much real estate, which really interferes with MDI applications like Paint Shop Pro. I guess I'm in a minority though since I got modded "troll". Sigh. Additionally, it seems to convey a lack of professionalism when someone does a demo in Luna/crayola for software that sells for hundreds of thousands of dollars. Most major companies I've seen gold-disk their XP Pro boxes with crayola turned OFF.

    7. Re:sarcasm by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Actually, IT is exactly where people like that belong. I think your opinion of IT might be a little out of touch with reality.

    8. Re:sarcasm by Monkelectric · · Score: 1
      If you're using paint shop pro, then you can't be very serious about working :)

      Although I agree, the first thing I always do is set the machine to "classic" mode and disable the theme service.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

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

      Why bother switching modes? Disable the service. Without the service running, it WILL be classic.

    10. Re:sarcasm by Unoti · · Score: 1

      problems so deep with the theme that they interfere with functionality. For example, window title bars consume too way much real estate

      I use the default theme on my machine at work. Real estate is the least of my worries. I'm using three monitors each at 1280 resolution, so my desktop is 3840 x 1024. I hadn't really noticed a problem with real estate.

      If you're having trouble with real estate on your machine, perhaps you should consider taking your machine out of 640 x 480.

    11. Re:sarcasm by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      Does anybody else immediately write another IT person off as a bumbling, stupid idiot if he runs the default Luna theme on his desktop? I honestly don't see how anybody can do any serious work with that theme on.


      Around here we are encouraged to use the default settings and customize as little as possible, so that we are more likely to run into the same problems that the "common user" will run into in the course of using our software. That way the problems are more likely to be found and fixed by us before they inconvenience any users.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    12. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen, I would need to actually test it out first for one the ugggggly cmd terminal better at least look as good as eterm or at the very least modern gnome terminal.

      If 2003 SP1 is any indication Longhorn could be something nice not worth the hype but nice.

    13. Re:sarcasm by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Actually, IT is exactly where people like that belong. I think your opinion of IT might be a little out of touch with reality.

      Just because they're there doesn't mean that they should be.

      An IT person--that is, not a sequestered back-end code monkey, but someone who provides an IT service to someone who has to actually use their computer for a job that would get done by hand if not for the PC--needs to be able to evaluate productivity and utility based on what the user actually does and actually needs.

      BOFH may be funny, but he shouldn't be in IT.

    14. Re:sarcasm by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      For example, window title bars consume too way much real estate, which really interferes with MDI applications like Paint Shop Pro.

      Wait for it--not everyone uses MDI.

      Oh, and not everyone uses their PC in the same way. For the same thing.

      And there are some folk who have bad eyesight, and for these folk having a 100-pixel title bar *is* a good thing.

      Most major companies I've seen gold-disk their XP Pro boxes with crayola turned OFF.

      That may be for the simple reason that it speeds up their machines. Nothing more, nothing less. Well, that and the fact that it looks like Win2k, which lowers their "yes, X is now at Y" calls.

    15. Re:sarcasm by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't want to make an enemy here, but you've hit on one of my personal hot buttons.

      The core vision of the company I work for is to make IT as you know it obsolete.

      Seriously. Right now, computers fucking suck. Seriously. All of them, even the ones we make. Computers are absurdly unreliable, and ridiculously hard to operate. The mere fact that we've raised an entire generation of people who think that IT is a valid career choice is testament to how we've dropped the ball for the past forty years.

      We're just now -- literally, just this week -- starting to get to the point where computers are beginning to understand two vital things: inference and implication. If I e-mail a document to somebody in my address book, my computer can now infer that that document is related to that person; when I search for that person, I get that document, or vice versa. That's just the tip of the iceberg.

      Servers should be entirely self-configuring, entirely self-adapting. Can you believe that just a couple of years ago, people had to sit down in front of servers and key in lists of IP addresses to enable things like print services? You had to actually sit down and tell your computer about the printer sitting next to it.

      No more. Now, with Bonjour (née Rendezvous, and please don't ask) computers and services are auto-configuring. This is, again, just the tip of the iceberg.

      You're probably going to hate me for saying this, but IT employees contribute absolutely nothing to an organization. They produce nothing, they transport nothing, they collect nothing. They're an expense. One we hope to render completely obsolete.

      Will we still need computer repair men? Sure! We need air-conditioner repair men. We need electricians. We need plumbers. But the idea that a small business should be expected to keep an air-conditioner repair man or an electrician or a plumber on staff full time is absurd. Someday, hopefully sooner rather than later, the idea that a small business should have its own computer repair man will be equally absurd.

      That's our goal. That's where we think we're headed.

    16. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You know what, other Apple employees read this board. And if you really are an Apple employee, you might want to watch your language, if you don't want to have management try to figure out who you are by what you know.

      Regardless of your passion, your language does not reflect well on Apple. I'd almost think you were some 15 year old with a student developer account on ADC or paid the regular price to get access to Tiger seeds, so you know what's in the software.

      People on this board are Apple customers or potential Apple customers. Insulting them is unbecoming. If you really are a Tiger engineer, perhaps you need some time off away from the computer before you post more.

      What's more, some people like posting to boards like this without thinking that the corporate mothership is watching their every move. Why not let people discover Tiger for themselves and speculate about it? It builds more excitement about it if they learn just how cool stuff is on their own.

      It's like you want to stifle discussion or something. I don't really think you're an employee, because you'd post anonymously.

      Or maybe you're actually from the competition, trying to leave a bad taste in people's mouths.

      Which is not to say that what you say is necessarily untrue or in some cases unfunny, just, not said with Apple elegance, and thus, should not be said with the Apple 'we.'

    17. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      'sup Apple buddy.

      I agree, this guy comes across very badly. You're probably right; the more of his stuff I read, the more I think he may not really be an employee. On the other hand, I've seen some employees (far too many, really) who actually do talk like this guy, so he could actually be for real.

      In either case, I'm done correcting him. Let him be an ass on his own.

    18. Re:sarcasm by Scampura · · Score: 1
      Watch your language? I'm not sure what that means. I think we all ought to be more concerned with watching our logic, and he's done a stellar job of that in all his Slashdot postings.

      Speak for yourself. I think Apple is lucky to have such an articulate, visionary advocate on Slashdot.

      As Seen on TV, I hope you won't stop posting here in response to this sort of drivel. There are plenty of Mac users who are genuinely fascinated by what you have to say. I'm one of them.

    19. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I didn't post the "watch your language" thing, but I do agree with it. The guy is abrasive, speaks as though he speaks for the company as a whole, skirts the lines of confidential disclosure at times, and is flat-out wrong about things that tend to make you wonder if he really is an employee (see here and here, as well as a few other things I can't really get specific about.)

      If you want to read a real, confirmed Apple dev's thoughs, why not check out Dave Hyatt's blog?

    20. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That's our goal. That's where we think we're headed."

      You're not in marketing, you don't speak for the company.

    21. Re:sarcasm by vadim_t · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On the contrary. The problem is that the general population had been fed a pipe dream to them, and now are finding it wasn't true. You are right now describing this dream.

      I don't need IT people myself. Computers are easy to fix and service. IMHO, the largest problem ironically is with all the usability improvements that have been made.

      Try with a comparison:
      Not so long ago, at a company that sells stuff the computers would run DOS. The disk would be nearly blank, the only thing running on it constantly would be the selling terminal application. It would be efficiently handled with only the keyboard.

      Then there would be a big server somewhere handled by a few people without much trouble.

      These days, the same computer runs Windows. It faces viruses and worms due to stupidities committed in the name of ease of use. The same application is now a GUI, which makes it really pretty, but adds extra workload in the terms of interface programming, which increases the possible failure mode, and makes automated testing harder.

      The whole system is managed by an army of often poorly educated people, who run around the company removing viruses, reinstalling systems, and bitterly complaining that people can't just get into their head that life would be much easier without Outlook.

      Not saying that the UI hasn't improved, but I'm pretty sure that for commercial purposes the DOS version of all this stuff was working better.

    22. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      omg, you are stupid "sarcasm" as title, you shouldn't be in IT if you can't even read properly

    23. Re:sarcasm by Cederic · · Score: 1


      >> IT employees contribute absolutely nothing to an organization. They produce nothing, they transport nothing, they collect nothing. They're an expense.

      Can you please explain to my CEO why he's about to lose 40% of his revenue and 60% of his profit because his IT employees have just decided to switch off the websites?

      Can you also explain to him that he's about to lose the other 60% of his revenue because we're also switching off the inventory, reservation and financial systems?

      Good luck to him in 18 months after he's put together the paper trail to find out who he owes money to.

      ~Cederic

    24. Re:sarcasm by Makarakalax · · Score: 1

      Love your posts man, keep them coming :)

    25. Re:sarcasm by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      People on this board are Apple customers or potential Apple customers. Insulting them is unbecoming.

      ???

      In what way did he insult Apple customers? In truth, if computers worked correctly and easily there would be little reason to have a large IT staff.

      It's like you want to stifle discussion or something.

      He wants to stifle discussion by talking about Apple's direction and Tiger?

      I just don't understand what issue you have here. If you don't like this person's opinions, fine, but he (or she) has the right to say whatever they like and if you don't like the content, well that's what the mod system is for.

      Personally I agree that computers are too hard to use and require too much information from the user that they should be able to discover for themselves. I think the MS monopoly has held computers back for years and Apple is one of the best hopes for real innovation that makes computers easier and more powerful. I hope Apple developers agree with me. I also hope IT departments shrink and development departments grow. It's not that I don't like IT people, it's just that I want my equipment to work without lots of human intervention.

    26. Re:sarcasm by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I don't want to make an enemy here, but you've hit on one of my personal hot buttons.

      I generally like your posts, but this one was kind of dumb. Look, we've been hearing this promise for about 30 years now, and I don't think it's any more true today than it was then. The fact is that companies staff all of their mission-critical business functions and probably always will.

      Examples? My company is not a shipper, but we have a full-time employee that handles shipping arrangements, puts incoming parcels where the belong, and has outgoing boxes ready when FedEx gets here. We're also not a staffing company, but we have an HR person. Neither are we a construction company, but we have a maintenance guy who also remodels our building as needed. Finally, we're not an IT consultant, but we have IT people on staff.

      IT people will go away whenever companies no longer use IT. Until then, every place that depends on their services for daily operation will have employees that run them, just as they also have shipping, HR, and maintenance workers. I like your company (and would like them even more if you sent some free stuff my way, hint-hint), but you've done an excellent job of advancing the state of the art of the computers on the average employee's desk. That's just the tip of the iceburg for a lot of us, and no amount of CUPS-style printer autoconfiguration will change it.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    27. Re:sarcasm by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Look, we've been hearing this promise for about 30 years now

      And we're actually doing something about it, as opposed to the folks who have just cynically given up on it.

      What's the problem?

    28. Re:sarcasm by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I'm glad that you're working on it, just as the rest of us are (and have been), but I think that "making maintenance easier" is a far cry from obsoleting an entire class of workers.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    29. Re:sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Automating everything isn't a new or daring idea. It's useful as a target, but it's stupid to think we can get there. As things get automated, the time of techs and programmers is freed up and they dream up new things that the computers can do. And some of those things are worth the trouble even though there's no automatic configuration for them. You're dreaming of a future where no new capabilities are ever invented.

      Either that, or you're going to build systems that are so smart they can automatically assimilate every new technical feature, no matter how human-oriented its purpose or buggy its implementation. I for one do not welcome our new super-intelligent autoconfiguration overlords.

  9. Screenshots? by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He's complaining that the screenshots aren't very different? I thought the point of Longhorn was primarily the changes within the OS internals.
    I could pop a Ferrari engine into a Pinto, and this guy would complain about the air freshener hanging from the mirror.

    --
    get a free laptop

    1. Re:Screenshots? by TheIndefiniteArticle · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      right on, brother

    2. Re:Screenshots? by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 4, Funny
      I could pop a Ferrari engine into a Pinto, and this guy would complain about the air freshener hanging from the mirror.

      ...see, I'd be complaining about how the Pinto suddenly started flipping itself with its own torque...

      --

      Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    3. Re:Screenshots? by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, it wouldn't flip itself -- as soon as the rear bumper touched the ground it would blow up!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:Screenshots? by avdp · · Score: 1

      Maybe true, but a change in the internals is not going to get consumers to buy it. I don't know if that's the "trainwreck" that the author was thinking of, but it is trouble for Microsoft, who has been having greater and greater difficulties in getting consumers to upgrade.

    5. Re:Screenshots? by pavon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He's complaining that the screenshots aren't very different?

      Where did you get that? I read all the links and a couple other of his blog entries and didn't see anything that mentioned why he disliked it at all - just that he was disapointed, and he will have "more about that later". Which makes it a fairly pointless story to discuss, but ... :)

      If I were to complain about this release it would not be because it was not different, but because many of the changes are bad. Scrollbars in a menu? That isn't an issue with lack of polish leading up to the beta release - that is a stupid idea that should have never made it past the design stage. There are a few other bugs shown - look at the column headers in a non-column view of the new file explorer, but those can be written of as pre-beta problems. The visual theme also needs alot more polish which is understandable for a prebeta, but I like the direction they are taking it.

      But really there isn't much to say until someone that has tried it actally writes about it unlike this story.

    6. Re:Screenshots? by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 1

      Which consumers are we talking about? I could be wrong, but I would think the OS upgrade market was miniscule. The only copy of windows most end users buy is the one that comes with their computer. Many businesses (like my employer) are locked into renewable contracts with MS so we effectively have to rebuy our (very discounted) licenses every three years anyway. It's not really a question of whether or not we'll make the purchase so much as whether or not we'll install the upgrades. Even if most businesses dont have a similar contract (probably true), I would think that IT dpartments considering upgrading would do so based largely on the technical merits of the OS. In fact, many organizations might consider an interface upgrade to be a pain in the ass... if I had a dime for everytime I had to help someone change the XP start menu to classic.

      Sure, there might be a PHB that likes the idea of upgrading because of the new desktop theme and fade effects, but he was probably going to upgrade anyway. I guess along those same lines, you could have a bunch of end users who are disappointed that everything looks the same, wondering what exactly they payed for.

    7. Re:Screenshots? by NeuroManson · · Score: 1

      Myself, I'd be complaining about the Pinto exploding at random for no apparent reason... Oh, wait, we ARE talking Microsoft.

      --
      Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
    8. Re:Screenshots? by aysa · · Score: 0

      but those screenshots should be really impresive!

    9. Re:Screenshots? by Deusy · · Score: 1

      He's complaining that the screenshots aren't very different?

      I'm pretty certain that he actually gets to run the Longhorn beta. The screenies are just for the benefit of the mildly curious. The hardcore Windows zealots^Waddicts can get access through various channels to the public longhorn beta builds.

      --

      Free Gamer - Free games list and commentary

    10. Re:Screenshots? by datbox · · Score: 1

      Wait.. I'm confused.

      Is that a prediction for the pinto or longhorn?

    11. Re:Screenshots? by avdp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      On the corporate front - I guess your company felt for the "software assurance" crap. The Fortune 100 where I work is still happily using Windows 2000 and Office 97, and there are no plans to upgrade either one anytime soon.

      On the consumer front, I am well aware that most people get their copies of Windows pre-installed. But software usually drive hardware sales. Other than the enthusiast market that will buy anything the day it comes out, most people need a compelling reason to buy new hardware (unless the old one died) and this ain't it.

    12. Re:Screenshots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in any case (chorus) "Windows users are crash-test dummies!"

  10. Redmond by sammykrupa · · Score: 1

    "Redmond speed-up the copies."

    1. Re:Redmond by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 4, Funny

      "Redmond speed-up the copies."

      We get signal!

      (sorry, I couldn't resist)

      --
      get a free laptop

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

      Main screen turn on!

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

      It's you!

    4. Re:Redmond by GrassMunk · · Score: 1

      How are you gentlemen

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

      How are you AC? All your joke are drawn out too long.

    6. Re:Redmond by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Main screen turn on.

  11. Opinions on GUI. by baadger · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The purple start button is aweful. Generally I think it looks ghastly, but atleast they ditched the sidebar.

    Does/did the Windows 2k classic style GUI really need replacing?

    1. Re:Opinions on GUI. by j14ast · · Score: 3, Insightful

      yes.
      looks at apple. (see's the sexiness that is osx)
      looks at linux. (see's the shear glee of wobbly windows, and enlightenment)
      looks at 2k. (see's something that looks worse than os7, never mind x, and looks shlocky compared to any linux wm short of kde1)
      looks at xp and goes blind.

      --
      Damn the man!
    2. Re:Opinions on GUI. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally I think Aqua looks absolutely terrible, so yes, it is just an opinion.

    3. Re:Opinions on GUI. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >looks at linux. (see's the shear glee of wobbly windows, and enlightenment)

      Nobody uses enlightenment, and wobbly windows are not implemented in any meant-for-everyday-use desktop environment.

    4. Re:Opinions on GUI. by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think it's actually a slight improvement from XP. But yeah, "ghastly" describes it well.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    5. Re:Opinions on GUI. by mshaslam · · Score: 1

      Yes, but they should have replaced it with something better, not worse.

    6. Re:Opinions on GUI. by Red+Alastor · · Score: 1

      So what ?

      Longhorn isn't out either.

      --
      Slashdot anagrams to "Sad Sloth"
    7. Re:Opinions on GUI. by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      How are you able to correctly leave the apostrophe out of 'looks' but not out of 'sees'? Is there any reason why an apostrophe should be in the latter but not the former?

      In any case, many people do not want their computer to look like the Las Vegas strip. They want it to be usable and for text to be legible. Most eye-candy enhancements only decrease usability (except for window shadows, which do alleviate some of the flaws of the WIMP interface).

      I do agree that the default XP theme is blindingly awful.

    8. Re:Opinions on GUI. by Nicholas+Evans · · Score: 1

      I don't. As far as I know, the XP left start menu bar doesn't have a scrolly bar on it. I find that to be ghastly. I've had enough fun looking at all of the stupid bloat that people have put in there - and with me always thinking that was for things you used OFTEN AND COMMONLY (I *really* doubt you use that 'Anti-Virus' thing or the 'Free AOL!' thing very often), this just provides more reason for people to cram loads of crap in there. Wouldn't it just be easier to get rid of the second bar and save some screen space? It isn't like anyone uses the Programs folder anymore. They just cram every little thing into the root menu!

    9. Re:Opinions on GUI. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry. You're not alone. To my eyes it looks so very ugly. Blotchy and mis-shapen.

    10. Re:Opinions on GUI. by dedeman · · Score: 1

      Absolutely, for the eye candy effect. What kind of OS worth it's salt has blocky icons, bland non neon colors, and defaults without silly happy alert sounds, dragons, penguins (WHAT??!!), and devils? Not my OS.
      Oh wait, yes it does, I use win2k/SuSe. I atcually like Win2k because it doesn't cause blindness on bootup. Now, there is no grassy knoll, but it's nice "cornflower blue" default background isn't painful to look at.

    11. Re:Opinions on GUI. by cortana · · Score: 1

      Hey, System 7 looked great damnit!

    12. Re:Opinions on GUI. by KillShill · · Score: 1

      win2k and classic on xp are quite good and refined looking.

      perhaps you are addicted to eye candy but i'm not.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    13. Re:Opinions on GUI. by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Oh, I wasn't thinking about the scrollbar; I was only paying attention to the color scheme. I would hope the scroll bar isn't meant to be there and that it'll get fixed later.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    14. Re:Opinions on GUI. by snuf23 · · Score: 1

      "see's the sexiness that is osx"

      That's just gross. I don't care if your OS makes you feel like getting a wank on. Please keep your autoerotic Mac fantasies to yourself.

      --
      Sometimes my arms bend back.
    15. Re:Opinions on GUI. by SmittyTheBold · · Score: 1

      A-MEN, except I'd tend to vouch for the OS 8 (or System 7 with the Aaron extension) as the prettiest-yet-most-functional OS I've ever had my hands on. OS X may bring some new things to the table, but it just doesn't feel as refined as the classic Mac OS became over its 15-year tenure.

      --
      ± 29 dB
  12. ME? by shamowfski · · Score: 5, Funny

    Train Wreck nothing. If we are going to refer to unreleased software as a trainwreck, then what the hell are we going to call Windows ME?

    1. Re:ME? by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      the light at the end of the tunnel?

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    2. Re:ME? by shamowfski · · Score: 1

      Flamebait? Flamebait nothing. If you are gonna waste moderator points flame-baiting that, then you must be that guy who sits around loving thier windows me box, and waiting to flame-bait people who rip on the worst modern operating system.

    3. Re:ME? by mkiwi · · Score: 1

      Windows ME is a cafeteria full of 1st graders who are in a food fight- with the occasional wetting of the pants because "I wasn't expecting the sausage to hit me there..."

    4. Re:ME? by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      Try upping the catastrophe ante to, say, oh, Chernobyl or something...

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    5. Re:ME? by Draconix · · Score: 1

      Train Wreck nothing. If we are going to refer to unreleased software as a trainwreck, then what the hell are we going to call Windows ME? A train that caught fire during construction, melted, and set the surrounding city ablaze?

      --
      By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
    6. Re:ME? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what the hell are we going to call Windows ME?

      Like climing into a septic tank to find that ring you accidentally flushed the night before. Squish, squish, "damn this is going to take forever."

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

      then what the hell are we going to call Windows ME?

      Windows: Masochistic Edition, because only a masochist would use it.

    8. Re:ME? by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      Windows ME was a train wreck that you were trapped in, and tragically the onboard film of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace got stuck in a loop of a Jar Jar Binks scene.

      As you wait for rescue, the scene plays over and over again, sapping your will to live...

    9. Re:ME? by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      A train that caught fire during construction, melted, and set the surrounding city ablaze...

      ...then sank into the swamp.

    10. Re:ME? by dfj225 · · Score: 1

      A nuclear detonation localized in your computer case.

      --
      SIGFAULT
    11. Re:ME? by dangitman · · Score: 1
      Train Wreck nothing. If we are going to refer to unreleased software as a trainwreck, then what the hell are we going to call Windows ME?

      Worse than Hitler?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    12. Re:ME? by B.D.Mills · · Score: 1

      How about a food fight with people who throw slices of beetroot?

      --

      The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. - Edmund Burke
    13. Re:ME? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone with any sense of personal dignity has already stopped referring to *cough* ME at all.

    14. Re:ME? by fallen1 · · Score: 1

      We're going to call it exactly what it is - a clusterfuck. Verging on nuclear. With acne. '-)

      --

      Dream as if you'll live forever.
      Live as if you'll die tomorrow.
      ~Anonymous~

  13. The build for WinHec is a build for driver makers by km790816 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It was made very clear that the build for WinHec was soley provided as a platform to test driver compatability. MS still has a couple of months until it releases Beta 1.

    Please hold your flame till then.

  14. Train wreck? by winkydink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As long as they don't totally fvck up what they already have, I can't see a train wreck.

    Windows ME. Now that was a train wreck.

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    1. Re:Train wreck? by ShyGuy91284 · · Score: 1

      Amen to that. Never before have I had multiple family members PC's decide to die w/ a kernel falure if Word or the directory Explorer were opened... Windows ME, I would choose 3.1 over you... Or OS/2..... Well.... Maybe not 3.1....

      --
      In undeveloped countries, the consumer controls the market. In capitalist America, the market controls you.
    2. Re:Train wreck? by chemistry · · Score: 2, Funny

      Naw. win98 was the train wreck...ME was the aftermath.

    3. Re:Train wreck? by czarangelus · · Score: 1

      Hey WinME wasn't so bad... crashing every two hours is what got me to discover Linux. ;)

      --
      When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him.
  15. Screenshots by FriedTurkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I actually like the new look. It is 20 times better than the default XP theme. I have to switch every XP work machine to "Classic" because I hate the "Fisher-Price" coloring scheme of XP. Computers should look professional and not like "My First Computer".

    1. Re:Screenshots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be honest, I'm just a curious bystander who likes to see what MS can deliver in 2005/6 and this definite does not look like an OS of the time we are living in...

      I'm sorry but this is just my 2 cents,

      R.

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

      I have to agree with him. The simple grey and blue looks really nice and they took away the big red X button. I don't know what MS was thinking with XP but I don't need my close button to have a warning on it (red). I would use this theme, but I have never used the XP theme for more more then the time it takes to click windows classic apply.

    3. Re:Screenshots by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      Twenty times better?

      I only thought it was 13.7 times better. ...

      Seriously - how do you get a number like twenty? Would twice as good be enough?

    4. Re:Screenshots by FriedTurkey · · Score: 2, Funny

      Seriously - how do you get a number like twenty? Would twice as good be enough?

      I counted the times I wanted to kill Bill Gates while looking at the interface. I found I had 20 times less homicidal thoughts.

    5. Re:Screenshots by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      Why not just change the color scheme to "Olive Green"? It looks a heck of a lot better than the win95ish "Classic" scheme.

    6. Re:Screenshots by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree with you more about the "Fisher-Price" look. That's why I use windowblinds. Right now I have my system looking a bit like MacOS using the MacOS X Tiger Brushed Aqua theme and a dock at the top of the screen :-)

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    7. Re:Screenshots by nawspac · · Score: 1

      Damn straight. I just hope a theme similar ships as the default. Maybe then people will quit writing shitty interfaces that try to match the default xp theme.

  16. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  17. Beta 5048? by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is 5048 the expected release date?

    1. Re:Beta 5048? by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      5048 would be the build numbers. That means there are 5047 builds that, in the opinion of Microsoft developers, sucked even worse than this beta!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    2. Re:Beta 5048? by Da+Fokka · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Yeah, it's scheduled just before the release of Duke Nukem Forever.

    3. Re:Beta 5048? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi Locke2005, I'm sarcasm... nice to meet you.

    4. Re:Beta 5048? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's stardate 5048, you insensitive clod!

    5. Re:Beta 5048? by KillShill · · Score: 1

      no thats the price in euros of a mac with comparable hardware of a pc system running longhorn.

      ba dum pssh.

      yeah its annoying from both sides.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    6. Re:Beta 5048? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only when you say it, it's neither funny nor true.

    7. Re:Beta 5048? by master_p · · Score: 1

      Yeap, they are waiting DNF to be released, so they can sold their O/S.

  18. Business as Usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We go through this same thing every year before Microsoft releases their next OS. Everyone gets all gloomy and doomy about how it's going to take too long, and all the features that get trimmed (cairo/winfs again), and the 632235 bugs still outstanding. A year from now all this will vanish and the hype will be unbearable. The press will be going nuts over the coming computer rapture. And then the same thing will happen as always when the OS is released. A few people will buy it and upgrade their computers. Most everyone else will simply get it from their OEMS when they buy a new computer, whether they want it or not.

    1. Re:Business as Usual by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      And the bugs will still be there, the missing functionality will still be missing, many of us won't upgrade to that version, and some of us will rip that OS out by the roots and install that last version that actually worked.

      And some of us will bail out and go Mac or Linux.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  19. Why is this news? by earwiggie · · Score: 1

    Don't tell me you guys actually expected Microsoft to come up with something good ;)

  20. I'm unimpressed by vraT · · Score: 0

    I was really hoping they'd break away from the fisher price visual scheme. Then again, I guess they are tailoring to the majority...

  21. "Train Wreck" by adam1101 · · Score: 1

    "My thoughts are not positive, not positive at all. This is a painful build to have to deal with after a year of waiting, a step back in some ways. I hope Microsoft has surprises up their sleeves. This has the makings of a train wreck. I'll have more on that later."

    This sounds pretty honest from an aledged Microsoft-shill.

    1. Re:"Train Wreck" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This sounds pretty honest from an aledged Microsoft-shill.
      There's Slashbot thinking for you.
      honest=agrees with me and lying = disagrees with me

  22. Go ahead and mod me -1 Flamebait but... by jleq · · Score: 0, Troll

    I've seen a whole load of Linux distributions that don't look *near* that good, even with a final release.

    1. Re:Go ahead and mod me -1 Flamebait but... by TheIndefiniteArticle · · Score: 1

      That's interesting, since linux can look pretty much any way you would like it to. You've seen Debian? With Nautilus, Gnome, and X11 for example?

    2. Re:Go ahead and mod me -1 Flamebait but... by jleq · · Score: 1

      Linux can look great with modification (Gnome is your friend); Windows can be modified as well... I'm just talking about the default "out of the box" look. It is a fact that most linux distros simply don't look good by default. It is stupid to criticize the look of a pre-release version of Windows just because it is Windows and is "evil".

    3. Re:Go ahead and mod me -1 Flamebait but... by Stevyn · · Score: 1

      Why not simply throw in some screenshots to help show your point? I thought it looked alright, but it wasn't revolutionary. However, I'm not expecting one of these releases to look revolutionary. Let them tweak the inner workings and then work on the GUI theme.

    4. Re:Go ahead and mod me -1 Flamebait but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly.

      It takes a long time to develop a new framework, especially when you're a big company with millions of customers and it must work on ALL of their machines, and that most developers can get along with. That's not an easy task. We've also heard that MS is hiding some of their more "interesting" developments because they're worried someone might copy them. This is a beta, not a final copy. It's too soon to be reviewing it.

    5. Re:Go ahead and mod me -1 Flamebait but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no excuse! They have been working on Longhorn for 4 years already. Train Wreck a coming! Sad to say!

  23. Mod the spammer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His sig shows with sigs turned off mod this spammer down.

    1. Re:Mod the spammer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares? No one made you click it.

  24. They can't ever do the "right" thing. by __aaitqo8496 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For once, I think Microsoft did things right by focusing on usability and not on pretty graphics to make geeks go "weeeeeee". Why is it that they can do no right? If it's too pretty, geeks complain. If it's not pretty enough, geeks complain. I would much prefer to have a solid bakend in alpha, and worry about the pretty stuff later. Do you pick the color of paint before the foundation of your house has been laid? If so, you might just have your priorityies misaligned.

    Furthermore, if you watch videos of the beta (which aare actuall of build 5060, no 5048), you will see Longhorn with the new effects enbaled, which is not the case by default on installation. I think it looks damn sexy and will give Mac OS X users a run for thier money.

    Do your homework before you post.

    1. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. It's unfortunate so many Linux users are so blind in their hatred for Microsoft that they can't focus on any of the 'good'.

    2. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by pyite · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except Mac OS X is here now and has been better than XP for many incarnations. By the time Longhorn is out, Mac OS X will be even better. See the problem? When you try to outdo technology that was popular in year x-3 and don't release it until year x+3, you're six years behind. This is the same problem the Linux desktop has.

      --

      "Nature doesn't care how smart you are. You can still be wrong." - Richard Feynman

    3. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "...you will see Longhorn with the new effects enbaled..."

      I use Windows XP and, well, I guess we're two different people, but I don't want any effects. As the matter of fact, the first thing I did when I installed XP for the first time was figure out how to turn all the effects off.

      I don't hate them... I simply want to get work done and really don't need eye candy to do so. Sure, I could use Windows 2000, but there are some things about XP that I do like.

    4. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by __aaitqo8496 · · Score: 1

      My original comment was not fully clear. I didn't mean specifically Mac OS X, but I mean, *whatever the current operating system produced by Apple Computers is at the time of release of Longhorn*.

      Besides, you can't directly compare releases of Windows and Mac OS either by revision number or date. They're completely different beasts and are therefore subject to different validation.

    5. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by FLAGGR · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Have you seen that start menu? More usable? It's got a motherfucking scrollbar inside of a fucking menu.

      Whats next, a row of ugly windows tabs, with some hidden, or even better multiple rows of tabs?

    6. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The homework where we know, time and time again, Microsoft neither gets the eye candy nor the backend right? Where we can neither call it good, nor pretty? Are you talking about that homework.

      There has to come a point, mind you, it might not be the same point for everyone so I have to be a little tolerant, where you say "too little, too late". With me, that point has come and gone, and I cant believe that it's that far off for other people. But what do I know?

    7. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 1
      As the matter of fact, the first thing I did when I installed XP for the first time was figure out how to turn all the effects off.

      So, turn them off and do your thing. What's the problem? A two-minute Google search tells you how to lose any of the effects you want.

      I'm not really sure what point you're trying to make here. Choice is good, right? Isn't that what I hear around this place ad nauseum? So, choose what you want and get on with life. Despite what the zealots want you to believe, one could train a pigeon to strip away the extraneous candy from Windows.

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
    8. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by great+throwdini · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Besides, you can't directly compare releases of Windows and Mac OS either by revision number or date. They're completely different beasts and are therefore subject to different validation.

      What utter drivel. They're both operating systems, aren't they? Both offer the same basic functionality to users, don't they? If I were looking to migrate from one to the other, wouldn't I have to directly compare both on some level?

      "Different validation"? What on earth...?

    9. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by __aaitqo8496 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Would you directly compare a race car with a minivan? They're both automobiles. They both operate in the same manner and servce a similar purpose (to transport), yet you wouldn't compare them directly. They are made by different companies and serve different purposes.

      Do you care how many people your race car seats or how much cargo room it has? Problably not.

    10. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Have they ever built a solid backend, at Beta stage or otherwise?

      Seriously, am I the only one who wants to see an end to new features until after they make the damn thing work?

    11. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by oldwolf13 · · Score: 1

      now I absolutely hate the default look of xp, so I won't speak on the so called 'eyecandy' (altho I think these screens look better).

      I must say tho, that while not at the leaps and bounds I would hope for, microsoft as consistently been getting better with their os's. I couldn't imagine going back to 9x, and while 2000 was definately the most stable of the windows family, xp seems quite a bit better for games and media, so I'd say that ms is slowly getting it 'right'.

      then again, when (if) the drm they're pushing starts to affect me, I might just sing a whole new tune. So far I'm not worried about this, tho... most of the mp3's I've got I have the cd of... I don't use the online music stores, nor would I use them if/when movies come out... I'll download a rip, or an iso of the dvd if I really want it.

      Having this said, i'm thinking longhorn will be really disappointing.

      --
      If I can't smoke and swear I'm fucked.
    12. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Do you pick the color of paint before the foundation of your house has been laid?"

      I'm pretty sure someone designing a house from the ground up would have the paint colors chosen well before the foundation were set. Hell, most women given the option to design a new house would start by shopping for decor and then demanding that the architect make the new purchases fit the house. Naturally, the paint colors will be chosen right after the draperies and valences have been purchased, and they will all match beautifully.

    13. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by great+throwdini · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Would you directly compare a race car with a minivan?

      Explain how MacOS::Windows (or any two consumer-grade OS, for that matter) is like minivan::racecar, and maybe I'd be able to follow your train of thought a bit better.

      Let's be honest here, both OS X and Windows Whatever are in the same camp. They're made to fulfill the same purposes, regardless of company backing and unlike the specious automobile analogy offered above.

    14. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Dynedain · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you pick the color of paint before the foundation of your house has been laid?

      Obviously you have never built your own home or even seriously thought about architecture. Yes of course you pick the paint before you start the foundation. You don't want to be designing while in final production do you? That would be stupid.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    15. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the hell did this get modded up in the first place?

    16. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by rokzy · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that a race car was meant to win races and a minivan was meant to move objects about.

      maybe you meant Windows is only supposed to go around in circles whereas Mac OSX is supposed to actually get things done?

    17. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by dcam · · Score: 1

      I wish Microsoft would stop concentrating on adding features I don't want or need. Take some XP improvements for example:

      1. Get rid of the freaking searching dog when searching for files, or at least make it possible to get to a real interfact without resorting to registry hacks.

      2. Any time you plug in a USB drive, windows trys to "auto-play" it. What is with that? It is a drive. Mount it and move on. As someone who has disabled autoplay for CDs, I'd love it if you could also do this for anything you plug in.

      3. Whiz bang jelly bean interface that I switch off so I can actually do some work. How much time did Microsoft spend developing this for me to just switch it off?

      How about some real and useful changes:

      1. Nothing can steal focus. NOTHING. EVER. This is a huge sore point. No application should ever be able to steal focus for any reason at any time. This includes "helpful" informative messages from the system tray. If you can't make this default behaviour (and you damn well should), provide a registry setting to do it.

      2. Fix explorer & mounting CDs/DVDs. When you throw a CD into the drive it locks up explorer whil it spins up. Even if the thing has been mounted, when you open up explorer it pauses to load the CD/DVD drives. This should only happen when you actually go to open them. Sure it is nice to have the title of the CD and an icon, but load them up as they become available.

      Explorer should be separated into two logical processes. One for display, and the other to mount & unmount file systems. One should not block the other.

      The is the same as when you got to access a network drive that is not connected. You should be able to immediately deselect that drive and go to another drive, as this is often a mis-click. You shouldn't have to wait while it takes a couple of seconds, then tells you that the drive is not available.

      --
      meh
    18. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by skiman1979 · · Score: 1
      Do you pick the color of paint before the foundation of your house has been laid?

      Why yes, actually that's what I did. My wife and I had colors picked out for our rooms, siding, shingles, etc. before our land was even cleared. Aside from the paint, everything had to be selected so the house (modular) could be delivered when it was ready with the appropriate colors.

      Why should I have to wait for the house to be built before deciding what color I want?

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    19. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      as far as the USB drive problem goes, I don't even have anything plugged into my USB ports except for a printer, and I have that icon in the systray where if I click it I can "Safely Remove USB Mass Storage Device - Drives(G:,H:,I:,J:). Why do these drives show up (in My Computer as well) when I don't even have anything plugged in?

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    20. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by sneakers563 · · Score: 1

      "This is the same problem the Linux desktop has."

      I disagree. Gnome had a disorganized, patchwork approach to GUI design YEARS before Apple came along with their "let's make some stuff brushed metal and leave the rest as aqua" theme.

    21. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by FuturePastNow · · Score: 1

      Those are flash memory card readers. They are treated as separate devices from the printer.

      --
      Give a man fire, and you warm him for the night. Set a man on fire, and you warm him for the rest of his life.
    22. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by CaptKilljoy · · Score: 1

      >You don't want to be designing while in final production do you? That would be stupid.

      Well, if you believe some of voices in the software industry and computer science, yes, you do.

      (Which is not to say that I believe them yet.)

    23. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      Are you saying my g, h, i, and j drives correspond somehow to my 9-in-1 reader? Those drives are labeled as USB mass storage but there is physically nothing in those ports on the tower (same for the 9-in-1) so the drive letters shouldn't show up.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    24. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by FuturePastNow · · Score: 1

      Actually, yes, your nine readers certainly are the four drives. Obviously, I don't know what model printer you have, but assuming its 9-in-1 is the same as every other 9-in-1 reader, they are: Secure Digital, MultiMedia Card, Compact Flash, Microdrive, Memory Stick, Memory Stick-PRO, Smart Media, eXtreme Digital, and USB. SD and MMC are one slot, CF and MD are another slot, MS and MS-PRO are another slot, and SM and XD are the fourth slot. Those are your four drives. The ninth, USB, won't show up as a drive unless something is plugged into it (it's really a one-port hub on the printer).

      As for whether they should show up as drives with nothing plugged in, some readers do that and some don't. My two-slot reader (with no printer attached) is drives H: and I: even with nothing in the slots. If I unplug it, those drives disappear. Go figure.

      --
      Give a man fire, and you warm him for the night. Set a man on fire, and you warm him for the rest of his life.
    25. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      interesting. that explains it :)

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    26. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
      Have you seen that start menu? More usable? It's got a motherfucking scrollbar inside of a fucking menu.
      Have you actually tried it yet? You may actually find it easier to use than the current Windows XP start menu. You can't totally judge usability from a screenshot.
    27. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you directly compare a race car with a minivan?

      Why not? Mac OS is like a race car. Such as a Ferrari - basically an expensive, flashy toy for people who have too much money and not enough sense. You can do practical things with a Ferrari, but you have to get past the "Whee! Look at this!" stage first.

      Windows is like a minivan. The minivan is a workhorse, they are everywhere, yet no one pays them any attention. Yet, minivans get a lot done, and they do their jobs well. And while many people like to bash the humble minivan, many of these same people have one parked in their garage (though, they may not admit this!).

    28. Re:They can't ever do the "right" thing. by whereizben · · Score: 1

      Actually with a house my family just built, the paint color wasn't chosen until we were ready to paint the exterior, which worked out fine, and why wouldn't it?? The siding was fine with just primer on it over the summer, so why couldn't we decide then?

  25. Scroll bar in menu by hey · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Did you see the scroll bar in one of the menus?!
    Why? There's still room on the screen for it to taller. A scroll bar should be the last resort.
    Yuck.

    1. Re:Scroll bar in menu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GTK has a similar annoyance, in order that popup menus are centered on the currently selected item they end up showing a big block of empty menu and a scroller, when the whole menu could fit comfortably on screen.

    2. Re:Scroll bar in menu by CrackedButter · · Score: 1

      Dude THAT'S innovation! Scroll bars INSIDE menu's!

    3. Re:Scroll bar in menu by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Why? Because the code to make the scrollbar disappear isn't there yet, apparently.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:Scroll bar in menu by blargosity · · Score: 1

      Yea. It is great when you hate waiting around for a really long menu to scroll, just to get to an entry at the bottom of it, such as the most recently added bookmark in your bookmarks list.

    5. Re:Scroll bar in menu by clem · · Score: 3, Funny

      I believe the scroll bar is temporary until the "menu slide show" functionality is completed. Once that's implemented, the menu will show you one animated icon at a time with marquee-style text prompting you with, "Is this the application you wish to run?" After a two second delay the next menu-item is displayed.

      Don't worry though if this sounds tedious. A set of slide show controls nested within the menu will allow you to skip forward, backward, and set the delay time between slides. Who would of thought such a rich user interface could be imbedded into a menu?

      --
      Your courageous and selfless spelling corrections have made me a better person.
    6. Re:Scroll bar in menu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That simply means you have a bad menu. The menu shouldn't be that long to cause that problem.

    7. Re:Scroll bar in menu by blargosity · · Score: 1

      I guess you are right. My bookmarks are a bit disorganized.

    8. Re:Scroll bar in menu by Stephen+Chadfield · · Score: 1

      I have heard they are planning to add menus to scrollbars with entries like "Scroll Right" and "Scroll Left".

  26. I thought everyone loves to stare at train wrecks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    maybe this is the new strategy?

    "Where do you want to go tomorrow? No trains today."

  27. Slashdot is the one looking like a train wreck.. by AdityaG · · Score: 1

    Slashdotters making non-microsoft hating comments in a post about Longhorn.

    Enough said.

  28. What did you expect, Bells and Whistles? by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    Most of the marketing hype around Longhorn isn't how pretty it'll look, but how much a programmer can do with it. Remember the DB driven file system, for the searches and everything? And what about XAML?

    To be sincere, I really DON'T KNOW what to expect from Longhorn. Anybody does?

    1. Re:What did you expect, Bells and Whistles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DB driven file system, XAML.

      Did someone take "Things missing from Longhorn" for 25 ?

    2. Re:What did you expect, Bells and Whistles? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "Remember the DB driven file system, for the searches and everything?"

      You're referring to WinFS, which was removed from the Longhorn non-server edition to bring it closer to being only extremely delayed.

      XAML has also been somewhat stripped down, though it's still in the roadmap so far as I know; at least, it is for the time being.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    3. Re:What did you expect, Bells and Whistles? by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      I expect it to auto-install applications like if they were web pages, thanks to the XAML and SOAP and all the other built-in technologies. Probably the new Office.NET will be web accessible with zero install and only subscription-based.

      I think this will be the only characteristic available to Longhorn only. Every other novelty (3D desktop, attribute-based filesystem search, centralized notifications management) will also be possible on Mac OS X and GNU/Linux.

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
  29. The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by bmajik · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I watched the 1hr45min keynote from WinHec that included a number of longhorn demos. I haven't personally been playing with LH builds so seeing the stuff demoed was new to me. I thought it was nice. The desktop search capabilities that will be in LH client inspite of not having a real WinFS underneath are surprising.

    I'm not interested in getting in a comparative argument with some other eye-candy oeprating system that apparently ships this month; i'm only speaking about longhorn in terms of what i saw demoed and comparing it to what windows xp does today.

    One interesting thing i noticed is that i thought some of the demos would be a bit.. "cooler". The underlying possibilities with the new frameworks that are going in should really have some growing room in them that the demos really didn't convey.. or so i'd think.

    The Metro format was a surprise to me as well. I'd be curious to see some sort of technical analysis of it. Note also that from a cursory glance it seems like a royalty free format that wouldn't necessarily shut out F/OSS implementations.

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    1. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      Do you happen to know if this "1hr45min keynote from WinHec" is available online?

    2. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by cortana · · Score: 1

      Metro appears to be MS' attempt to kill PDF.

      You can bet that parts of the format are patented, and the patents will not be licensed to creators of open source implementations.

    3. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not interested in getting in a comparative argument with some other eye-candy oeprating system that apparently ships this month; i'm only speaking about longhorn in terms of what i saw demoed and comparing it to what windows xp does today.

      So, you're the kind of person who takes a cheap and petty shot and then tries to define the issue so no one will respond? Oh, and I see you work for Microsoft.

    4. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by KillShill · · Score: 1

      i'm not sure thats not a good thing.

      pdf may be portable but the performance sucks a lot in the gfx display front.

      a pdf document with gfx bogs down on a very high end machine...

      i don't know what's at fault but i sure do mind it a ton.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    5. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by Cerebus · · Score: 1

      Really? My machine running DisplayPDF is pretty darn snappy.

      Just 'cause your application's implementation of it sucks is no reason to blame the technology, especially when you don't understand the difference between display compositing and viewing a freaking document.

      --
      -- Cerebus
    6. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by klui · · Score: 1
      One interesting thing i noticed is that i thought some of the demos would be a bit.. "cooler".

      Oh, you mean more eye candy?

    7. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by KillShill · · Score: 1

      you do realize that quartz is only a subset of pdf and even then the OS is highly optimized for displaying them quickly and smoothly.

      the fact that your opengl card helps with the process surely doesn't hurt.

      and every pdf viewing program i've used has bogged down with gfx, including adobe's own viewer.

      i wonder... how smoothly do pdf DOCUMENTS display on your syste,?

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    8. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm not interested in getting in a comparative argument with some other eye-candy oeprating system that apparently ships this month; i'm only speaking about longhorn in terms of what i saw demoed and comparing it to what windows xp does today."

      Spoken like a true corporate IT professional...

      A little myopic, wouldn't you say?

    9. Re:The WinHec demo seemed ok to me by klui · · Score: 1

      Just finished watching the keynote. Thanks for the link.

      I'm reminded of Tiger as the demo was progressing because the search, virtual views, and Metro was very similar to what Tiger has. Search was very rough because there was no real-time update, unlike Tiger. I am not fond of the fact that the Start Menu has become a kitchen sink of scroll bars, dialogs, and dynamic search content--what a mess. Overall, the demo is short on "coolness" and definitely not even in the same ballpark as an S.J. RDF(tm). MS has lots of work to do.

      It's strange how the guy who was demoing desktop search, Metro, etc uses Steve Jobs mannerisms. His hands does the classic tent and says "boom" in various places. I _think_ maybe even his cadence is the same as Steve's but quite obvious not as articulate. Maybe generating a 0.2 S.J. RDF.

  30. Black boxes... by MisterLawyer · · Score: 5, Funny

    "This has the makings of a train wreck."

    Shouldn't that say plane wreck now that Microsoft is using black boxes?

    1. Re:Black boxes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trains have "black boxes" too.

    2. Re:Black boxes... by child_of_mercy · · Score: 1

      Trains use black boxes too in modern rail systems.

      Much simpler to record as you already know where they are and which whay they're pointing.

      --
      'There is a Light that never goes out.'
  31. Mod Parent Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wish I has points. Thanks for the heads up.

  32. It's JUST an OS. by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What's so exciting about an OS? Isn't it the apps that we really care about? As long as the OS is secure, doesn't crash, and runs what I want it to run well on the hardware I choose to run it on, isn't that what counts?

    (And tack on "and is open source" as well for the perhaps 3% of the world who really understands why that matters...?)

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    1. Re:It's JUST an OS. by Alan · · Score: 1

      It is just an OS, but MS has been hyping it (well, their evangelists have been anyway) like it's the second coming. XML, Avalon, the new communictions layer, built in DRM, etc etc etc. If this was xp SP3 no one would complain, and in fact, they'd probably praise it for new features, improved graphics, and a new theme :)

    2. Re:It's JUST an OS. by avandesande · · Score: 1

      I would agree with you, except that microsoft has perverted it into something else, with things like IE integrated in the OS.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    3. Re:It's JUST an OS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "What's so exciting about an OS?"

      Yeah, eh? Only a nerd would have interest in news about an OS. You'd think we were on /.

    4. Re:It's JUST an OS. by PDAllen · · Score: 1

      Frankly, if someone produces an OS which meets your specs (and doesn't cost a million quid) then I could care less whether it's free / open source. One off payment of a couple hundred isn't worth worrying about.

      On the other hand, in the world of operating systems that actually exist, it's nice to be able to think that the annoying bug can be fixed - and if you want to you can fix it yourself.

    5. Re:It's JUST an OS. by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      But there is a difference between a command-line-only OS and a GUI OS, isnt it? I think that the OS has something to say about your workflow.

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    6. Re:It's JUST an OS. by Targon · · Score: 1

      If the new version is a big step forward compared to previous versions, it's worth getting excited about.

      If you are old enough to remember the old days of Windows for Workgroups 3.11, the jump to Windows 95 was a HUGE step forward.

      The jump from Windows 95 to 98 wasn't as big, but it was a decent step forward and again was worth looking forward to.

      Going from 98 to XP was another nice jump. In addition to a lot of the bloatware, there were a number of rather nice additions when it came to plug and play, as well as things like CD burning. I know that it's bloat for a lot of people, but for an end user, it's nice that there is a way to easily drop files onto a CD without manually needing to run a third party program.

      Going from 2000 to XP helped from a compatability perspective with older Win95/98/ME programs. The big negative is the bloat with no way to get rid of it.

      So, now we have Longhorn comming up. With 64 bit versions, if Longhorn is more compatable with old 8 and 16 bit programs than Win XP 64 bit, that would drive sales for people who still enjoy older games. And since I KNOW that comment will draw some responses, I don't have the room to set up an older computer just for that purpose so that isn't a solution.

    7. Re:It's JUST an OS. by booyabazooka · · Score: 1
      As long as the OS is secure, doesn't crash, and runs what I want it to run well on the hardware I choose to run it on ...

      Yep... just keep waiting for that, if you so desire, although I recommend not holding your breath.

      The rest of us who have given up are content just hoping for an interface that's decently usable and pretty.

    8. Re:It's JUST an OS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes and no. Good OS can provide good foundation and tools that app authors can use without much fuss. That can free them to work on more interesting aspects and to polish their apps. For example, CoreData and CoreImage/CoreVideo. Now app authors can get functionality such as Spotlight and image compositing for free or minimal effort. So, they can focus on making the whole thing better.

    9. Re:It's JUST an OS. by nytmare · · Score: 1

      It's not just an OS. It's also an operating environment including GUI, API, and numerous bundled software programs. The look of the OE determines the look of everything you run, aside from games which operate in their own environment.

    10. Re:It's JUST an OS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, it's just an OS. Doesn't matter at all. I'm sure you'll be content to go back to DOS 2.0 (did that even exsist?). An OS is becoming an outdated term. An operating environment is more aptly defines what people are currently using. Bundled (and fairly complete) libraries, core kernel functions, and wide device support are what make up todays OS's. These have always been there in one form or another, but they are becoming more and more complete. OS X and Linux both meet what i've previously laid out, but I can tell you what I use (read: not the cluster of crap that is Linux).

  33. Fester... by Stanistani · · Score: 5, Funny

    >to quote Thurrot: 'This has the makings of a train wreck.'

    *Dons engineer cap and lights cigar*

    Just call me Gomez Addams!

    1. Re:Fester... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever noticed who Steve Ballmer looks like?

  34. If you'd ever been to Longhorn while skiing by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 2, Informative

    you'd know it was really not much.

    The name of the project is a reflection of the ski hill area.

    And so Longhorn is really just not that interesting, either.

    Now, if it had been called Granite, from the Red Mountain Ski Area in the Purcells up in BC, instead of from the coastal mountains, we'd be cooking with gas!

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:If you'd ever been to Longhorn while skiing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks like a bit of Whistler envy.

      Did Red even open this year? Heck, last year they didn't get much snow either.

      Does Rossland even have a bar that is remotely close to the Longhorn? All I remember is a trucker bar where the women are more like men, and the men are more like bears.

    2. Re:If you'd ever been to Longhorn while skiing by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Did Red even open this year? Heck, last year they didn't get much snow either.

      Yup, in fact they were one of the only ski hills to actually get their usual snowfall, considering they're up in the Rockies north of the border, where most of the glaciers aren't melting - most of the ones in Washington State are melting fast and half will be gone soon.

      Does Rossland even have a bar that is remotely close to the Longhorn? All I remember is a trucker bar where the women are more like men, and the men are more like bears.

      Not as long as at Whistler, where Longhorn is, but then that means if we are to infer from Longhorn (actual) that Windows Longhorn will be slower than many other OS, wide (which is why they chose the name), and a b.tch to get off when newbs are using it with you or right before you.

      Crash city!

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  35. surprise.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft is one of the most profitable software companies of the world (the most?). Despite of having basically an ilimted amount of money to invest in technology, they've had to remove half of the features of longhorn (the latest one was a href="http://www.osnews.com/comment.php?news_id=10 422">NGSCB).

    And even doing that, they've delayed it several times. They can hire the engineers they want, they can waste the money they want. Still, they aren't doing anything useful. The problem is, as always, the not-engineer people, who don't have idea of were Microsoft is going. The golden days of getting revenues by changing the document format in Office are gone. The days where being compatible was everything and people loved it are partially gone because internet allows to update things

    And because they don't have an idea of where microsoft is going, they invest in nearly every market they can: Servers, games, xbox, search engine, keyboards, mouses, data bases, programming languages. Microsoft is trying to fight with all the industry, and they can't win.

  36. Riiiiight . . . by erikharrison · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Frankly, I think Paul has the need to call it bad at this point.

    If it is bad, Paul is the guy who should be the one to call it first, he's life is so tied up with Windows Development.

    Second, by calling it a "train wreck" prior to release allows him to provide a nice counterpoint to his ridiculous cheerleading, so that when Longhorn is released, he can whoop and holler and say stuff like "It was touch and go for a while, but MS has released the greatest OS since TOPS-20!".

    The fact that Longhorn likely WILL be a trainwreck is orthogonal to whether Paul would call it one at this point in it's development.

  37. why is it a train wreck? by DarkDigger · · Score: 1

    The article was kinda short on content. The author failed to tell why Longhorn is going to be a "train wreck."

  38. Longhorn - overrated by treff89 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft touted Longhorn's features such as WinFS however they have failed to appear in this, the first Longhorn "release". It seems like Microsoft is simply releasing an OS as quickly as possible as opposed to checking it thoroughly for bugs (I know, I know, it's a beta release, but beta with MS = pretty close to the real thing). This is yet another reason why Microsoft is steadily losing ground to Linuses and other alternative OS's. The quality of their software is simply low as they are trying to force out features to meet a schedule, as opposed to FOS OS's, which are simply there for the features (and yet update more often). A good sign of where the world is heading in terms of computer software.

    1. Re:Longhorn - overrated by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      but beta with MS = pretty close to the real thing

      Surely, beta should be pretty close to the real thing whoever you are? Alpha is for "don't trust this, it's nowhere near stable or feature complete".

      (Yes, yes, there are release candidates too, but I see them as being "if you don't scream bloody murder about something, it isn't changing")

    2. Re:Longhorn - overrated by nine-times · · Score: 1
      Microsoft touted Longhorn's features such as WinFS however they have failed to appear in this, the first Longhorn "release". It seems like Microsoft is simply releasing an OS as quickly as possible as opposed to checking it thoroughly for bugs (I know, I know, it's a beta release, but beta with MS = pretty close to the real thing).

      Well, in general, a "beta" should be feature complete. Yeah, it's sort of arbitrary terminology, but, as you said, Microsoft betas tend to follow that rule as well.

      To be honest, I'm not sure what the advantage of Longhorn is supposed to be at this point. It kind of seems like the release keeps getting delayed while they drop features. If Microsoft's history is any indicator, we'll end up spending $300 for a release for bug-fixes, a new theme, some new eye-candy, and all the controls moved to new places.

      I'm actually hoping that won't be the case, but as more news comes out, it keeps looking that way.

    3. Re:Longhorn - overrated by TechnoPope · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight, you're going to judge Longhorn based on a Beta, that's more than a year away from release? Did you ever think that maybe they didn't want to release all of it?

      It's 2005, they said it should be out "in time for Christmas 2006." That's a year. If MS has an army of developers working on this, that's a lot of time. Both to find bugs, but also for their competitors to copy...er implement some of their stuff. Do you honestly think that MS will release it's full UI in a beta build a year from release? That would be immensely stupid on their part. Here's an idea, we'll show all of our competitors, both open and closed, what our new UI is going to look like. And we'll do it early enough that they can do their own versions of it to trivialize our release. Get real.

      This build isn't meant to be like an OSS beta. OSS "betas" are treated like full fledged programs. Look at FF, everyone gobbled it up like it was crack when it was in v.7. Commercial software works differently. Since their selling this to make money, they aren't just going to give out a fully functioning preview release to the masses. They're going to be adding features, removing others and testing the crap out of this.

      So instead of jumping to conclusions about what Longhorn will be like, just sit back and chill. You have no idea of what's going on in the Empire's stronghold. Everything you say about what will happen, what won't be in the software, what will work, and what will fail is conjecture. You're too far removed in terms of time or connections to the Longhorn release.

      --
      Slashdot...it's like Fox news, but without the biased sl...or maybe not.
  39. The makings? by cca93014 · · Score: 1

    Whereas his web server is a train wreck. These jokes aren't funny, btw.

  40. *cough* BULLSHIT *cough* by DroopyStonx · · Score: 4, Funny

    NOTHING from Microsoft is disappointing.

    I call shenanigans.

    --
    We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
    1. Re:*cough* BULLSHIT *cough* by TheIndefiniteArticle · · Score: 1

      Oh, I better go get my broom!

    2. Re:*cough* BULLSHIT *cough* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evil shenanigans?

  41. Title by kc0re · · Score: 1

    Strickly referring to the title of this article. Are you suprised? I know this will be modded redundant. But, seriously, what starkling breath taking innovation has Microsoft invented or implemented into their OS'es in the past however many years that someone else didn't have first?

  42. Wow by Pike · · Score: 5, Funny

    The commenters on Paul's site are even more juvenile than we are.

    1. Re:Wow by ckswift · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I take it you don't read at -1 do you?

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

      You suck!

      (just trying to help us regain the lead)

    3. Re:Wow by Pike · · Score: 1

      ah yes I was forgetting

      Good Point :D

  43. So its pretty clear the purpose of Longhorn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is to cram DRM down everybody's throat.

    DRM in the form of better license enforcement from MS.

    DRM in the form of WMP 11 which will attempt to lock away any trace of our ability to copy music and video to our PC and use it at will.

    DRM in the form of "trusted" computing which, not ironically, is exactly untrusted computing, since it turns your PC into a spy and snitch for MS.

    I'm not even a Mac fan, but my next PC will be a Mac. This is all too much. I guess its par for the course for "World Intellectual Property Day". A day set to remind us that "All your base are belong to us".

  44. Recycle Bin Moved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like they moved the default location of the bin to the upper left? No more mac emulation? :P

  45. Shadows in the shadow world by magarity · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Recycle Bin icon casts a shadow to the left. All the other shadows, including RB's own text, casts shadows to the right. Is it because the RB is itself in a shadow world halfway between here and oblivion??? Such subtle metaphysical goings-on in Longhorn!

    1. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm glad somebody else pointed this out. This made the rounds internally under the headline "What's wrong with this picture?"

      Look, I'm not gonna criticize Microsoft for showing early, very rough code and having it look ...well, early and very rough. If you go back and look at the Mac OS X public beta, or even the 2004 WWDC demo of Tiger, you'll find that our early builds differ significantly from the final releases of our products.

      But the thing is...every single one of us, to a man, would be ashamed to show something like that in public. Seriously, we'd hang our heads in embarrassment.

      Microsoft's position, of course, is, "Don't look at the icons or the controls. They're not important. We're demoing underlying technology." Which is fine. But that's not how we do things. If you're going to take the time to put a UI on a demo product at all, take the time to do it right. Don't just slap something on there and say, "Oh, this'll all come out before we ship." That's not fair to your product or your customers.

      It's just another sign of the difference between our philosophy and Microsoft's philosophy. I don't think either one is objectively right or wrong, but I won't hesitate to tell you which one I think is better.

    2. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you're going to take the time to put a UI on a demo product at all, take the time to do it right. Don't just slap something on there and say, "Oh, this'll all come out before we ship." That's not fair to your product or your customers.

      I absolutely agree. Here are a couple of similar glitches in Tiger:
      • Activate Dashboard, the iChat/Volume/Battery/Clock menus in the menu bar still work and pop up over the Dashboard layer.
      • Open a .pdf in Preview, activate Dashboard, and the cursor will change to a hand as it floats over the (dimmed and unclickable) document.
      • Dashboard Translation widget, click the 'swap' button several times and the focus ring will flicker madly
      • Finder, start renaming a file and the insertion caret will flicker twice on each keystroke until the name wraps to the second line
      • System Preferences/Mail, now showing the third major window style on the system (Aqua, Metal, and now Plastic)
      • Spotlight, randomly fails to index non-boot-drive partitions
      These are of course all user-visible things. Out of interest, you may want to sit down with some of your developer tools (Shark, MallocDebug, QuartzDebug, etc) and a copy of the HIG and see how many rules they break.

      Your response may be "oh well, they're all minor - in a big bit of software like an OS there's always stuff like that". Which is quite true - there is, from anyone.
    3. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has a history of doing this. They release a very early beta/alpha and say "don't worry, the final version will be SOOO much better" and when it turns up on shelves, it's oddly similar to that beta/alpha from 2 years ago.

      No doubt Longhorn RTM will have a nicer coat of paint but I really doubt it will be all that much different than what we're seeing here today.

    4. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by pragone · · Score: 3, Funny

      Steve... is that you???!!!

    5. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by podperson · · Score: 1

      It's even funnier than that. The recycle bin is *lit* from the left and shadows to the left (so the person who designed the icon didn't put the shadow in? Or has a short attention span?

      The odd thing to my mind is that MS has been dropping shadows to the bottom right for a long time (it's in XP, it's in 3.0) -- a nice faithful copy of Mac OS 1.0. So ... have they been thrashing that particular decision with Longhorn? Wow, productive use of time.

    6. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I just checked each of these on my machine.

      Activate Dashboard, the iChat/Volume/Battery/Clock menus in the menu bar still work and pop up over the Dashboard layer.

      Not correct. A click outside a widget dismisses Dashboard.

      Open a .pdf in Preview, activate Dashboard, and the cursor will change to a hand as it floats over the (dimmed and unclickable) document.

      Not correct. Outside widgets, the cursor is an arrow regardless of context.

      Dashboard Translation widget, click the 'swap' button several times and the focus ring will flicker madly

      I wasn't able to reproduce this. I don't know what you meant by "several." I clicked it 20 times. No error.

      Finder, start renaming a file and the insertion caret will flicker twice on each keystroke until the name wraps to the second line

      That was an occasional bug in 8A425. Are you using a pirated copy?

      System Preferences/Mail, now showing the third major window style on the system (Aqua, Metal, and now Plastic)

      No, that's Aqua.

      Spotlight, randomly fails to index non-boot-drive partitions

      Obviously not reproducible. Spotlight will not index a volume if there's insufficient free space available. We look for about 1/10th of one percent, if I remember correctly.

      Your response may be "oh well, they're all minor"

      No, my response is "Please stop using pirated copies of Tiger that you download off the Internet and then complaining about them."

    7. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by mpapet · · Score: 1

      I was working for a hardware OEM who had to test betas like this and witnessed both Microsoft and Apple go through these development cycles.

      Back then, they were not pretty in the beginning. When they got close to release, then they'd include the eye candy. I'm not sure if it works like this now, so YMMV.

      I can remember thinking what a shameful hack XP's eye candy was when I saw it for the first time. The timing of the XP GUI release was just a couple of weeks after OSX's pretty GUI release too. That made it even more sickening.

      Mike

      --
      http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
    8. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      Unless what we're seeing is the low-end crap hardware UI and DirectX 9 graphics equipped machines will get a really great whiz-bang interface when MS stops hiding it for fear of copying (or whatever their reason).

    9. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      There's a difference between internal builds and public demos. Our internal builds are pretty hairy, too. But we'd never show them.

    10. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by KrispyKringle · · Score: 1

      ``It's just another sign of the difference between [Apple's] philosophy and Microsoft's philosophy.''

      Right. Apple's philosophy being Steve Knows Best. Or, in more detail, don't tell customers any details that Apple deems irrelevant. Don't tell them about unfixed security vulnerabilities. Don't tell them how to fix the disk:// URI handler vulnerability, or even acknowledge that it exists. Don't tell them that FileVault in 10.3 is completely fucking useless because the swap files are unencrypted (Christ, talk about a silly mistake). Don't tell them when new products will be out, but make a whole lot of hype just to screw with the market.

      Sure, we all love Apple because they're cool. I'm a big fan of my Powerbook, and a partial convert to OSX (from Linux). But I'm also happy to see Microsoft realizing the value of true computer security (before you laugh, check out the number of vulnerabilities in any of their recent products--go to Secunia and compare IIS6.0 with Apache, for instance). That doesn't mean they embrace full disclosure, but they embrace ``responsible disclosure'' (this is certainly a separate debate, but for what it's worth, I agree with them). They know that holes go public, and they try to make sure the best information is available to their customers once that happens.

      Apple's philosophy? We'll tell you when there's a problem, and there's no problem (just don't look behind that curtain).

      Of course, security isn't the only place that Apple has a problem, with respect to openness. You call it ``taking the time to do it right,'' but I call it ``suing loyal Apple fans who generate product buzz before a release.''

      Anyway, no offense to you--assuming you are really an Apple employee--but the amount of new technology going into 10.4 isn't much compared to that which was (at least supposed) to go into Longhorn. Other than new developer APIs and some cool bundled applications--oh, and encrypted swap--are there any serious features added to the core OS? I haven't ordered Tiger yet, so forgive me if I'm wrong--but I haven't seen any hyped on Apple's website, either.

      You say that Apple takes the time to do it right. I say they take the time to put the glitz on things, sometimes at the expense of ``doing it right.'' But you're right, it is all about priorities.

    11. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by drew · · Score: 1

      They release a very early beta/alpha and say "don't worry, the final version will be SOOO much better" and when it turns up on shelves, it's oddly similar to that beta/alpha from 2 years ago.

      I can remember cases (IE4 in particular) where significant features from the beta never even made it into the release.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    12. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by skingers6894 · · Score: 1

      Now, be reasonable! You can't expect Microsoft to commit to the Longhorn UI until Tiger is actually released can you?

    13. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by natrius · · Score: 1

      The Recycle Bin icon is actually just a satellite picture from Google Maps.

    14. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by KillShill · · Score: 1, Insightful

      personally neither microsoft nor apple will get any money from me in the future.

      the industry is headed for open source and free(dom)
      software.

      proprietary products are a 20th century concept.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    15. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by argent · · Score: 1

      the third major window style on the system (Aqua, Metal, and now Plastic)

      No, that's Aqua.


      It doesn't look like Aqua to me. It looks like a slice of a Metal window with the brushed aluminum airbrushed out glued onto an Aqua one, and the stuff below the metal-style window looks like Aqua, but I can't believe the top section was laid out in a standard NIB file.

    16. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      ...significant features from the beta never even made it into the release.
      Like WinFS?
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    17. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1
      Anyway, no offense to you--assuming you are really an Apple employee--but the amount of new technology going into 10.4 isn't much compared to that which was (at least supposed) to go into Longhorn. Other than new developer APIs and some cool bundled applications--oh, and encrypted swap--are there any serious features added to the core OS?


      Are you saying, "Other than the new APIs and features, what are the new APIs and features"?

      For the record, I would say that CoreData qualifies as a pretty big feature, what with it meaning that in the future new file formats can be implemented that use all of two lines of code. CoreVideo sounds cool too, but since it's a step on the path to resolution independence.
    18. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even better. I know many windows users who pirate the o/s, antivirus, spyware scanners, etc. and they _expect_ free updates to their pirate versions. If they can't use the auto-update features of their not-paid-for software they get pissy and act like they've been ripped off. Some people.

    19. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Qwerpafw · · Score: 2, Interesting
      You're full of Bullshit. I mean this in the nicest possible way, but it's true.

      I've been a longtime user and administrator of Apple machines. I don't work for Apple, as you seem to point out in every single one of your Slashdot posts, but I do know something about the company.

      ...and Mac OS 10.0 was a JOKE.


      10.0 should have been the "Public Beta." Sure, Apple was going through an important transition period, but 10.0 was so incredibly bad that it perpetrated myths about OS X which still haunt Apple. Eye candy grinding the system to a halt? Spinning rainbow of doom? Unresponsive Finder? God forbid we begin to discuss the developer releases and betas. Apple menu? No Apple menu? ah HA! Lets put a blue Apple in the middle of the menubar where it can be covered up by text.

      Give me a break. Apple's fucked things up, and recently. In production software, no less. It's all fine and good to make fun of Microsoft on Beer nights, but when you come home to the company that released iTunes 2.0 (aka iDelete) you should be a little humble.
    20. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      >>Open a .pdf in Preview, activate Dashboard, and the cursor will change to a hand as it floats over the (dimmed and unclickable) document.

      >Not correct. Outside widgets, the cursor is an arrow regardless of context.

      Did you try this? I can reproduce exactly what the guy is talking about in 8A428.

      And yes, Mail's toolbar buttons are drawn in a style unlike anything anywhere else in the system. There is even a hidden preference (not going to say what) to change them back to the standard style. And when he says "plastic", he's clearly referring to the optional "no divider" toolbar/titlebar combo, which is new in Tiger and is not used by all applications. It's used in Mail, System Prefs, Xcode, and Spotlight, but is not used in Sherlock, Preview, Internet Connect, Activity Monitor, etc. As with metal, there seems to be little rhyme or reason as to when it is or isn't used.

      >>Spotlight, randomly fails to index non-boot-drive partitions

      >Obviously not reproducible.

      There are other cases besides just low disk space where Spotlight will not index a volume. That, coupled with the lack of UI feedback in regards to said volumes not being indexed, could easily lead a user to believe it is "randomly" failing.

    21. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      That's what NSToolbar looks like now. Check out any application with an NSToolbar and you'll see what I mean. NetNewsWire is a good example; I happen to have it running in a background window right now.

    22. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes, that explains why companies like Apple, and even Microsoft in their own, glacial way, are innovating on a fundamental level while Linux is ...you know. Not.

      I'm being totally serious now: Linux is easily twenty years behind Apple. Seriously. Think about where all the attention is going: Human-user interface design. That was Apple in 1985. Today, Apple is doing no-shit innovation.

      Even little things make a huge difference. Linux, being almost a file-by-file clone of Unix, is crippled by a vast and interdependent web of system watchdog services. There's init, there's inetd, there's watchdogd, there's cron, all separate and overlapping services whose job it is to start services. All complex, all in need of configuration. What did we do? We scrapped it all, replacing the whole mess with launchd. A single service with XML (meaning self-checking) configuration files.

      Do you know what happens on a Unix machine if your inittab file contains garbage data? The system refuses to boot! With XML configuration files, a config file that fails to validate will simply be ignored. The system will run in a degraded state until the file is corrected.

      It's stuff like that. Yes, we're doing big-time flashy innovation with things like Core Data and Spotlight. Those are no-shit world-changing things. But we're not just glomming new services onto old infrastructure. We're evolving the operating system, replacing things that are dumb with things that make more sense.

      So tell me again, oh please, how Mac OS X is a 20th-century concept.

    23. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That new look is optional, and not even all Apple-supplied applications use it (Preview doesn't, for example). There is a checkbox in Interface Builder's window inspector to turn it on, both for Carbon and Cocoa apps. It is off by default for new windows.

      See the other AC reply in this thread for more info.

    24. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by argent · · Score: 0, Redundant

      That's what NSToolbar looks like now.

      *choke*

      Oh god.

      Oh all the gods and their pet demons.

      Then... damn. I don't know if Spotlight is really enough to make it worthwhile upgrading to Tiger now. I guess that'll save me some money.

      What were you guys thinking? No, really?

    25. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, but he does appear to truthfully be an Apple dev (I'm one too). He should shut up, really. Not only is he obnoxious & hypersenstive, he posted some seriously incorrect shit later in this thread. I corrected him, but I doubt he'll listen.

      Based on his obnoxious tone, I think I know who he is, too. Some people are consistently ill-mannered in bugs and email, and you eventually learn to recognize their style.

    26. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      What has Linux added to the world of operating systems?

      I don't see a single innovation in Linux. It's all taken from Windows, Mac OS X, Unix and others.

      What is in Linux that I can't get anywhere else?

      I know that it's free, but I'm not in business so that's not a selling point to me. I want a feature or two to make me switch from OS X.

      And you know, look as I might, I can't see a single thing in Linux that I don't have at home on my Mac or at work on my Windows box.

      That's the biggest problem with Linux. It's developed by thousands of people whose idea of a good feature is purely what they've already been exposed to. There's no consistent UI design, no new concepts in the interface, no new concepts in applications...

      It's not really their fault - they do it as a hobby, generally. But no-one is driving innovation in Linux. It's *stagnating*

    27. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      You're asking about new 'serious' features?

      Why not look at the Apple developer documentation? Look into the new Core xxxxx features, see what SpotLight actually does (hint - relationships are in the new metadata), look at Automator for much more than just AppleScript, look at how XGrid is built in now, and how the OS is 64-bit...

      These are all big things in the OS, and all easily found on Apple's website. Perhaps you should review it sometime.

      And you repeat the whole 'Apple sues their fans' fiasco as though that's actually true. Apple sued a guy who knowingly published information under an NDA, which is an illegal act in California. They didn't ask for damages, just for the name of the source. It's not an issue of free speech, freedom of the press, or big bad Apple going after sweet and innocent Nic de Plume. It's an issue of Apple enforcing their legal rights. And before you ask - it's fine with me if Microsoft were to do the same. There was no issue of public good or the 'right to know' here, just people trying to cash in on another company's coattails by getting more page visitors to view their banner advertising.

      Bozos in the rumour industry give me the shits. They create false expectations and rarely follow up on their own errors (re: making stuff up). They also help drive sales down before an event. All in all, I have very little sympathy for these twits.

    28. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's optional. Half the programs in /Applications and /Utilties don't even use it. And you can always edit NIBs to turn it off in applications that do. (I bet Unsanity will eventually release a haxie to do it automatically for all apps at launch time.)

    29. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Knytefall · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Activate Dashboard, the iChat/Volume/Battery/Clock menus in the menu bar still work and pop up over the Dashboard layer.

      Not correct. A click outside a widget dismisses Dashboard.


      It's a subtle bug (and I am using a legit final copy of 8A428):
      1. Activate Dashboard
      2. Move a widget (I tried a sticky and the weather widget) over the Menu Extras area (i.e. iChat/Volume/Clock)
      3. Release the mouse button.
      4. Click AND HOLD on the widget over where a Menu Extra would appear (i.e. click on the widget where the menu bar clock would be).
      5. Drag the mouse. The Menu Extra's menu is revealed.

      This does not affect the any of the 'standard' menu items, nor the Apple or Spotlight Menus. It is also possible to initially position the widget over any location in the menu bar, click and hold the widget such that the mouse pointer is over the menu bar, then drag the widget over the menu extras and see the same error.

      It's not a big deal. But the problem is still there. =) I accidentally encountered this problem last night.

    30. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by garote · · Score: 1

      >>Spotlight, randomly fails to index non-boot-drive partitions
      >
      >Obviously not reproducible.

      great! Now where's the little X button next to the progress bar, under the spotlight menu, that lets me STOP AN INDEXING IN PROGRESS on a volume that I'm only connecting temporarily, that may contain sensitive document data?

      Spotlight has some serious UI issues as well, especially concerning the behavior of the search widget inside Finder windows.

      >>System Preferences/Mail, now showing the third major
      >> window style on the system (Aqua, Metal, and now Plastic)
      >
      >No, that's Aqua.

      Call it what you will. Whatever name you choose, it is definitely one thing: INCONSISTENT.

      Nevertheless, I consider it a step in the right direction, for one reason alone: It retains the UI-consolidating visual cues of brushed metal, without those STUPID, STUPID HANDLEBARS on the edge of every window. Apple did an incredible service to their UI when they made the _shadow_ of the window into the actual border delineator, meaning there were ZERO pixels wasted on bordering. Brushed metal took that innovation and slam-dunked it into the toilet. Thus, I for one welcome this new mid-ground plastic overlord. Now if only all the iApps were in this same style.

      Here's another bug for you to check off: Even if you enable the root user, you cannot drag executable files between folders in the System tree. Click the button to authenticate, enter your password -- and nothing happens. Thankfully, performing the same operations in Terminal succeeds. And hey! The finder auto-updates to reflect it! Nicely done.

    31. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "No, that's Aqua."

      The fuck it is. That just proved you're not in OS X development, asshole.

      -An Actual Apple Employee Who Knows What He's Talking About

    32. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 2, Funny

      In March of 2004, we got together in Tahoe for a three-day weekend retreat, the whole staff. We had day-long sessions where we divided up into functional teams and discussed all the various ways in which we could piss off some random and utterly inconsequential Slashdotter. This was what we came up with.

      Are you fucking kidding me? Like anybody in his right mind would believe for a second that you're sitting there weighing the options. "Hmm. On the one hand, system-wide search that will fundamentally change the way I work forever. On the other, a different-looking toolbar control. Decisions, decisions."

      Whatever, dude.

    33. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Now where's the little X button next to the progress bar, under the spotlight menu, that lets me STOP AN INDEXING IN PROGRESS on a volume that I'm only connecting temporarily, that may contain sensitive document data?

      I don't understand the question. Spotlight indices are stored on the volume itself. It's not like you're copying data from the removable volume to your system disk.

      But if you want to exclude a volume, all you have to do is drag it to the privacy pane of the Spotlight prefs window.

      Whatever name you choose, it is definitely one thing: INCONSISTENT.

      A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. If you're looking to Apple never to change anything ever, you're using the wrong company's products.

      Also: Wailing about textured windows has precisely as much effect today as it did five years ago: none at all. Don't like 'em? Buy a PC. It's a free country.

      Here's another bug for you to check off: Even if you enable the root user, you cannot drag executable files between folders in the System tree.

      Do me a favor and help me come up with a reason why you would ever want to do that.

    34. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Um. Duh. I've been saying all along that I'm not a programmer. I work in a different group entirely.

      But aside from that, the question was whether the combined title bar-tool bar appearance is a third window style. It's not. It's Aqua. Check out section 13 of the new HIG.

    35. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by KrispyKringle · · Score: 1

      Like I said, I haven't been reading that closely, and I'll probably investigate and buy Tiger at some point. And yes, it looks nice, but it doesn't look to be on the scale of some of the promised Longhorn features (if those ever happen).

      My point was that Apple's secrecy is at best a double-edged sword, and that talk of ``doing it right'' is really akin to talk of ``appearance is all that counts,'' which was, for one thing, my big complaint with FileVault--it had the appearance of security, but not the actuality of it.

    36. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by garote · · Score: 1

      >I don't understand the question. Spotlight indices are stored
      >on the volume itself. It's not like you're copying data from the
      >removable volume to your system disk.

      That's fine, and yet there is still no way for me to halt it. Dragging a disk from the desktop to a privacy pane shortly after I plug the device in doesn't stop it, though I assume it trashes the resulting index on the drive once it's finished, RIGHT? Otherwise, there's no easy way to stop Spotlight from creating an index of the volume.

      What happens if I plug that volume into a 10.3 system next, and move off all my sensitive data? Is the index still there?

      >>Whatever name you choose, it is definitely one thing:
      >> INCONSISTENT.
      >
      >A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. If you're
      > looking to Apple never to change anything ever, you're using
      > the wrong company's products.

      Thanks for the quip, Captain Sarcastic. But this is a legitimate issue. I don't care about the texture of the window, in fact I find any texture to be a good unifying element, as an alternative to the needlessly lined and over-embossed UI design that Apple started with in 10.0 - 10.1. What bothers me is the big fat grey border around all the windows using the 'brushed metal' UI. I can't use it to RESIZE THE WINDOW, so WHAT GOOD IS IT? The shadow _already_ informs me that the window has an edge.

      Relax, guy, sit back, have a cigar (sayeth Saddam in South Park), not everyone on Slashdot is out for an argument at the expense of discussion. I assume you're on the inside of the company and willing to share information, so I ask you: Why the big thick grey border? And will it go away, with a phasing out of Brushed Metal?

      >Do me a favor and help me come up with a reason why
      >you would ever want to do that.

      Sure, just as soon as you file a bug on it.
      I was moving my old build of imapd back into /usr/local/sbin, after an archive-and-install.

    37. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Dragging a disk from the desktop to a privacy pane shortly after I plug the device in doesn't stop it, though I assume it trashes the resulting index on the drive once it's finished, RIGHT?

      Nope. It shuts the mdimport task down.

      What happens if I plug that volume into a 10.3 system next, and move off all my sensitive data? Is the index still there?

      I'm still not quite understanding the question. Are you asking me where the indices are stored? They're stored in a /.Spotlight folder on each volume.

      What bothers me is the big fat grey border around all the windows using the 'brushed metal' UI.

      Sorry. It's not something we're going to change.

      Why the big thick grey border?

      Why not? Seriously, man, you're way overthinking this. It's just a design element. It's there because that's what the guys in the art department put there. You shouldn't get apoplectic over it.

      And will it go away, with a phasing out of Brushed Metal?

      I'm not sure where you got the idea that anything was being phased out. It's not.

      I was moving my old build of imapd back into /usr/local/sbin, after an archive-and-install.

      I'm confused. I thought you were talking about moving something from one folder in /System to another folder in /System. Maybe you should explain in greater detail.

      And if you want to file a bug, go right ahead. RadarWeb is open to anybody with an Apple ID. I'm not a programmer, so any bug I file will look exactly like a bug you file, and at this point I don't even understand the question.

    38. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by advocate_one · · Score: 1

      actually, if it were truly "innovative"... the shadows would be rendered properly and you could move the apparent light source and have the shadows move correctly. Imagine being able to drag a "Sun" icon (NOT SUN you dummies) around the desktop with the mouse as part of the desktop properties dialog...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    39. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Amiasian · · Score: 1

      Your sarcasm made my day.

    40. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Why? In what way would that make your computer easier to use? Or even prettier, for that matter?

      Do you happen to work for Microsoft? Because that sounds like a very Microsoft-y idea. Superficially kinda neat, fundamentally very stupid.

    41. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by guet · · Score: 1

      That's what NSToolbar looks like now.

      Really?

      http://photos.asleep.net/OSX-Tiger

      Looking at the screenshots here for example, it looks like NSToolbar has a gradient down from the top of the window in all cases, which looks nice - perhaps that's what you mean. But, I think what the other poster was referring to were the buttons in the Mail.app toolbar, which I have to agree look pretty horrible and don't appear anywhere else that I've seen - are they a new control or a custom thing?

      Not that you had anything to do with them or care probably : )

    42. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by advocate_one · · Score: 1
      actually I'm working on a far better desktop... Gnome 2.12 with Xorg and all the nice rendering features we now have...

      As far as I'm concerned... Microsoft is irrelevant, I don't need them anymore. I just get on with things knowing that everything, as they say, "just works"TM... unlike Microsoft where everything apparently, until they announced Longhorn, "works just"...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    43. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No iTunes, no Final Cut, no Keynote, no Mail, no iCal, no iChat AV, no Spotlight.

      You know, I think there's an argument to be made here that that thing you're so proud of shouldn't technically be called a computer at all.

    44. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by 10Ghz · · Score: 2
      Yes, that explains why companies like Apple, and even Microsoft in their own, glacial way, are innovating on a fundamental level while Linux is ...you know. Not.


      Which is why Apple got their HTML-engine from Linux? Why couldn't Apple "innovate" and write their own? Yes, I label KDE under Linux here, since you talk about user-interfaces. Linux doesn't have one really, whereas KDE (and Gnome and others) do, so I assume KDE and the like are "Linux" in this case.

      Think about where all the attention is going: Human-user interface design.


      If you think that "all attention" in Linux-land is going towards human interface design, you are WAY off-base! And what is this "Linux" you talk about? The desktops? It can't be the Kernel, since that thing doesn't really have "user-interface".

      That was Apple in 1985. Today, Apple is doing no-shit innovation.


      So, Apple spends no time or resources at Human Interface design these days? Oh, they do? Then why is it that when Linux-guys spend time on human-interface today, it "proves" that Linux-guys are 20 years behind Apple, but when Apple spends time on Human-interface today, it doesn't prove anything? Or maybe it proves that "Apple cares about the users". But if Linux-guys do the same, it proves that they are behind Apple?

      Damned if you do, damned if you don't. And besides, OS X is not paradigm of usability. Color-coding those close/maximise/minimise-buttons is just a big "fuck you!" to color-blind people.

      Yes, we're doing big-time flashy innovation with things like Core Data and Spotlight.


      Spotlight is like Beagle on GNOME, and Beagle was demoed before Spotlight was announced. So what was that thing about "innovation" you talked about? Why is it that Apple "innovated" when they announced Spotlight, but Linux-guys did not when they demonstrated Beagle before Apple demonstrated their solution? Is it because Apple made a huge deal out of it, whereas Linux-guys did not? Is that your definition of "innovation"? The length of the press-release?

      Yes, OS X is a fine OS. I have used it extensively on my Mini, and I can see why many consider it to be the best thing since sliced bread. But I'm planning to replace it with Linux/KDE in the near future. For the simple reason that I think Linux/KDE is better.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    45. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Oh, I thought he was asking about the toolbar itself. Buttons are just bitmaps, nothing special.

    46. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Which is why Apple got their HTML-engine from Linux?

      HTML rendering is a commodity, like a TCP stack. Why not take what's available for licensing so we can spend our time on other things? Meanwhile, let's talk about Core Data. Let's talk about launchd. Let's talk about Open Directory. Let's talk about Quartz. Let's talk about advanced typography. Let's talk about any of the technologies we've rolled out in the past five years that put us an entire generation ahead of Linux.

      And what is this "Linux" you talk about?

      Are you kidding?

      Color-coding those close/maximise/minimise-buttons is just a big "fuck you!" to color-blind people.

      Ever seen a traffic signal?

      Spotlight is like Beagle on GNOME

      No, it's not. Beagle is a content-indexing system similar to what every other operating system has. There's no relation between Spotlight and Beagle except in the very most superficial sense imaginable. All our developer docs on Spotlight go live on Friday. Please go read them. In particular, focus on the kernel-integration part so you can understand how file operations trigger import tasks. Focus on the extensible schema with support for arbitrary metadata attributes. Focus on the query language. These things are important.

      Why is it that Apple "innovated" when they announced Spotlight, but Linux-guys did not when they demonstrated Beagle before Apple demonstrated their solution?

      Let's set aside for the moment the unarguable fact that Beagle has as much to do with Spotlight as a raven has to do with a writing desk. Let's just ignore that for a moment.

      Spotlight is shipping. Now. Released. Working. In actual production. With full support and documentation. Third parties are already shipping Spotlight importers and Spotlight-savvy applications in advance of Tiger's release on Friday.

      Beagle is a loose proof-of-concept that even the developers say is for experimental purposes only. It has no documentation whatsoever and the UI looks like it was cobbled together by a twelve-year-old using Microsoft Paint. And according to the Web site, the way to run it is to download source code from a source-control server.

      I'm gonna say that again, because it matters. Spotlight is finished and shipping right now. The only way to run Beagle is to download the source code.

      Tell me again how they're just alike?

      For the simple reason that I think Linux/KDE is better.

      Better at what? I'm having a hard time thinking of things that Linux can do at all, much less better than something else.

    47. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Pablo+El+Vagabundo · · Score: 1



      I disagree. Apple certainly has a step up in technology and integration wrt linux. But philosphically linux and GNU is the next step.

      Having a completely open OS will open doors that apple will never reach.

      GPL and open source will change the computing world and be the dominant paradigm for the next decade. This is not a flash in the pan, the potential is huge.

      I have a feeling it could even be mathematically proven!!

      Pablo El Vagabundo

    48. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why not? Seriously, man, you're way overthinking this. It's just a design element. It's there because that's what the guys in the art department put there. You shouldn't get apoplectic over it."

      Uh oh. Sounds like you have an art department doing design, which can only lead to wildly inconsistent conventions between... oh wait.

      Design is the total that you get when you balance aesthetics with function. Consistency has been the main ingredient in the magical 'feel' part of the 'look and feel' that Apple has done right for so long.

      But now you have iPhoto inventing its own toolbar paradigm, Address book with so stylistically hidden buttons no-one finds them, a Finder listing things (Slideshow) in the 'Action' and Contextual menus, but not in the File menu... and on top those god-awful adolescent 'hey, its the 90s' brushed metal textures that are forced on you.

      I thought it was about user choice, not art department choice.

      Hopefully 10.5 will unify the fragmented user experience : )

      J

    49. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem you're seeing is that open source developers are reluctant to change anything about the underlying system, and that when someone proposes a change, it has limited adoption, confusing things further.

      Let me just go over documentation. There is a 1970s system of document processing, troff, that just about no one knows how to use, and that was made obsolete 25 years ago (When Knuth released TeX). Every single Linux distribution still has this document processing system because it is the baseline format for documentation (namely, man pages) in Linux: A 30-year-old obsolete text processing system.

      GNU tried to replace it with the almost-as-obsolete info format. The problem is that info does not have an easy to use browser; it has a very steep learning curve and no one has ever bothered to make a friendly (read: GUI instead of text interface) for info. However, Linux still needs an info browser since a number of GNU programs state, in the man page, that they don't document the format properly here, and to use the corresponding info page. So now we have two arcane documentation formats in Linux.

      Then there are programs which don't have a man page, nor do they have info documentation. These programs use a wide variety of inconsistant formats for documentation: docbook, html, TeX files (with html/postscript conversions), plain text files, pod files (Perl's documentation system), etc. Basically, there are a zillion ways to document files (and I'm just as guilty here: I created yet another documentation format for my program, so that I could easily convert the same almost-HTML into troff man pages, HTML pages, and plain text files).

      Even with troff man pages, there are two competing macro packages (subdialects, so to speak); most documents, thankfully, use the 'an' macro package, but there are a few documents which still use the old BSD 'doc' macro package.

      The reason for this is because Linux is a jungle; like anybiological system, there is a lot of diversity, even unnecessary diversity. It isn't based on a hierarchical system that we homo sapiens seem to prefer; it is based on the law of the jungle. Every single ecological niche ends up with many different species.

      This is either a good thing or a bad thing. It is a bad thing when a given program experiences feature bloat. For example, the vim editor requires about six arcane commands to be typed in to disable all auto-indenting, since vim has grown over the years, adding on more and more auto-indent systems.

    50. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Shokac · · Score: 1

      Don't worry about shadows, it will be fixed in SP1, release date June 2007 :)

    51. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      HTML rendering is a commodity, like a TCP stack. Why not take what's available for licensing so we can spend our time on other things?


      Sure you can do that. But I was just wondering that with your uber-leet innovators you could have done something better than those no-good copycats at KDE.

      "And what is this "Linux" you talk about?"

      Are you kidding?


      No, it's a valid question. Are you talking about the kernel? I assumed not, since you talked about user interfaces. Well, the UI's in Linux run on other systems as well. Well, FYI: not all attention in the user-interfaces are going towards user-interface design. And not all innovation in "Linux" is going towards the desktops.

      Ever seen a traffic signal?


      And that makes Apple's implementation "good"? Fact is that buttons with clear symbols would be alot better. Yes, the buttons in OS X have symbols, but you have to hover the mouse over them to see them. I think that those buttons in KDE for example are alot more usable than the ones in OS X are. The buttons are big enough, they have symbols that are visible all the time AND in addition they are color-coded on mouse-over. But relying on colors does make it harder for color-blind people.

      Spotlight is shipping. Now. Released


      And you can run Beagle right now. Today. Or are you stuck in the mindset that if it doesn't come in a shiny box, it doesn't count?

      And according to the Web site, the way to run it is to download source code from a source-control server.


      They have tarballs available, in case you didn't see them.

      Better at what? I'm having a hard time thinking of things that Linux can do at all, much less better than something else.


      Better at fulfilling my needs. Is it so hard to believe that someone, somewhere thinks that *shock and horror* Linux is better than OS X? Yes, I think Linux/KDE is better than OS X. And I gave OS X a shot, and I can see why many people love it. But I didn't fell in love with it. Better than Windows? Sure! Better than Linux/KDE (in my opinion)? Nope. And what are you going to do about that? Punch me in the face? Call me an idiot? Fact remains, that I simple like KDE more. And that opinion is not "wrong" in any shape or form.

      your attitude seems to be pretty arrogant. "I'm having a hard time thinking of things that Linux can do at all, much less better than something else.". That whole comment stinks of arrogance and ignorance. And to be honest, I have seen that in quite many OS X users.

      I did use OS X. I liked some things in it, disliked others. I understood why manypeople like it. But in the end, it wasn't good enough for me. And there are many people who think like I do. And those people are not stupid for thinking like that.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    52. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by groomed · · Score: 1

      But the thing is...every single one of us, to a man, would be ashamed to show something like that in public. Seriously, we'd hang our heads in embarrassment.

      That seems excessive. It's just a bloody dropshadow.

      Microsoft's position, of course, is,

      I don't think you're qualified to comment on "Microsoft's position", in so far as there even is such a thing.

      Don't just slap something on there and say, "Oh, this'll all come out before we ship." That's not fair to your product or your customers.

      Why?

    53. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1

      Finally, someone from Apple acknowledges that the new Mail.app toolbar icons are "nothing special." ;-p

      Seriously, I like the new NSToolbar, but I hate those Mail icons. What was wrong with the old ones?

    54. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1
      I'm not a programmer, so any bug I file will look exactly like a bug you file, and at this point I don't even understand the question.

      Ah, now we're getting somewhere... If I may be so bold, what do you do at Apple? I (and others) have noticed you posting a lot on Slashdot-- are you here as part of a PR campaign or does Steve know that you're spending so much time here? (Of course, I haven't been looking at your timestamps, maybe you're just off the clock, but it seems like to post as much as you do, you must be posting during work.)

      Feel free to ignore my question if you find it rude, but I'm just curious about why you're so open about working for Apple when you post here. I would imagine most Apple people on slashdot just try to keep their heads down and only comment on things like "build a potato gun from tin foil" and the like for fear of breaking their NDA.
    55. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
      Sure you can do that. But I was just wondering that with your uber-leet innovators you could have done something better than those no-good copycats at KDE.
      It's an HTML rendering engine for goodness sake! What exactly do you propose they innovate?
      And you can run Beagle right now. Today. Or are you stuck in the mindset that if it doesn't come in a shiny box, it doesn't count?

      ...

      They have tarballs available, in case you didn't see them.
      Yes, you can run Beagle right now if you know how to compile and install software from source. Reality check: the majority of users out there don't.
    56. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Terrasque · · Score: 1

      You should check out http://www.gnome.org/projects/beagle/.

      Especially http://nat.org/demos/ , and http://nat.org/demos/beagle-2.html

      Now, I've never seen dashboard, and I'm sure it looks much snazzier, and probably have a lot of cool stuff, but to say they are two entirely different things sounds a bit weird..

      --
      It's The Golden Rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules."
    57. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by argent · · Score: 1

      Are you fucking kidding me?

      A little, just a little. Spotlight is a very nice piece of technology, and it's doing something that I've really wanted for a very long time. There's nothing else in Tiger that's really exciting, and some of it seems kind of dumb, like the way Dashboard widgets are relegated to a translucent ghetto however fast and cool looking, but Spotlight is nice. It does what I've been doing with Harvest on my FreeBSD box, plus it keeps the cache up to date in real time instead of waiting until my nightly pass over $HOME.

      Though... I suspect you implemented the OS side of it in the wrong place. I'm pretty familiar with the BSD code (say hi to Jordan for me) and I've looked at what you have in Darwin and it sure looks like you could have done everything you need to notify the userland side of Spotlight, your daemon, from the vnode layer. There's a handful of VOPs that need to be reported back to userland, and you can track changes in the vnode and file modification dates so you wouldn't need to actually put any code in the critical path of write. In fact I suspect that you might even be able to get the same stuff working on FreeBSD without any kernel changes by using kevents, but I'm not sure there's quite enough hooks and that stuff doesn't seem to have made it over to Darwin anyway... alas.

      Do that, and it would work over ANY file system... not just HFS+.

      Which would be nice.

      Why? Well, I'd really like to run with UFS instead of HFS+ under me. I switched back to the Mac a couple of years ago and I did try an install with UFS a couple of times, though, and some programs objected... so I went back to HFS+. Since then I've had several occasions where HFS got so corrupted that fsck_hfs couldn't fix it. That bothered me, it's something I'd expect from Microsoft, not Apple. I've never had UFS corrupted so badly that fsck couldn't fix the file system structure itself, and aparently having HFS+ break itself so badly you need to take heroic measures to put it back together again is a long-standing problem from the classic Mac OS days.

      Spotlight would make it a damn sight harder to get back to UFS should HFS+ tick me off enough, which gives me another reason for wanting to stay clear: I can EASILY see getting totally hooked on Spotlight. And much as I like Mac OS X, stuff like this makes me worry about getting that hooked.

      On the other, a different-looking toolbar control.

      Yep. Well, the user interface is a good chunk of why I'm in the Mac world at all. It's a lot nicer than what I've got on my NeXTstation and in GNUstep on FreeBSD. A nice user interface and having actual third-party commercial software available on top of the rock-solid OS I was already using is what convinced me to buy an old Mac and a copy of Jaguar and give it a shot.

      And, I mean, a few messages up there you were making a big deal about the angle of the shadow in an icon. You're laughing now, but you really do know that the details of the user interface are important... and when someone has an immediate and perhaps irrational negative reaction to a change in the user interface, well, you know... there may be a problem there.

      Just maybe, it's not entirely irrational.

      You did a good job with Panther. The changes to Aqua itself between Jaguar and Panther are almost all improvements. I don't care for all the Metal but except for a few legacy Carbon apps (unfortunately including Finder, but that's a rant for another day) I can get rid of that by tweaking the NIB file.

      As you know, look and feel is important, and I can't see how the new NSToolbar can possibly be an improvement. It changes a part of the window visuals that should stay in the background: the Aqua window decorations, especially in Panther, are very nicely done, they're understated and elegant, they do their job without distracting attention from the application. You could say they're supporting characters on the user interface stage. The use of uniform visuals for these common elements has been one of the attractive things about the Mac. But now you've got these windows aggressively asserting "Hey! I've got a TOOLBAR! Isn't that COOL!"

      Why? Can you explain that?

    58. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      t's an HTML rendering engine for goodness sake! What exactly do you propose they innovate?


      Surely their innovators can create even better engine? One that is alot faster, renders better etc. etc. Why do they need KDE for it?

      Yes, you can run Beagle right now if you know how to compile and install software from source. Reality check: the majority of users out there don't.


      Majority of Linux-users do. As do *BSD-users. And those are the target-audiences of this tool. And I wouldn't be surprised if some distros offered binaries of it as well.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    59. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Lauwenmark · · Score: 1

      Some thoughts about this.

      Yes, that explains why companies like Apple, and even Microsoft in their own, glacial way, are innovating on a fundamental level while Linux is ...you know. Not.

      "Linux" (and the whole trend behind it, but also other systems and projects like FreeBSD) has at last been innovative in two ways:
      - It showed that a cooperative development based on free will and open standards could lead to complex software projects that were able to stand up the comparaison against products built on the previous logic of closed, in-house, nearly reclusive development. And not only it is working, but for some it is also an economically viable model;

      - On the specific point of technological innovation, Linux contributed to bring several technologies that were only available on costly enterprise systems to the masses, or only experiments. Think about the logical volume manager, software raid, efficient system virtualization or journalled filesystems. It is Linux and Free/Net/OpenBSD that pushed things to the points they are today, not Apple.

      I'm being totally serious now: Linux is easily twenty years behind Apple. Seriously. Think about where all the attention is going: Human-user interface design. That was Apple in 1985. Today, Apple is doing no-shit innovation.

      What you seem to forget is that Human Interface Design studies are currently the focal point because it is a way to get what your users want. I find pretty sane to see developers asking themselves "How can we make that software easier to use ?" all the time. Ease of use is a keypoint in today's software strategies and human-friendly designs is what's going to make a difference. And if you think that Apple isn't deeply investing on Human Interface Design anymore, then you'd better get more informed.

      Even little things make a huge difference. Linux, being almost a file-by-file clone of Unix, is crippled by a vast and interdependent web of system watchdog services. There's init, there's inetd, there's watchdogd, there's cron, all separate and overlapping services whose job it is to start services. All complex, all in need of configuration. What did we do? We scrapped it all, replacing the whole mess with launchd. A single service with XML (meaning self-checking) configuration files.

      Several points to address here:
      - Linux isn't a "file-by-file" clone of Unix; a unified Unix doesn't exist anymore for more than 20 years. It uses a similar base organisation - just like OSX does.

      - There is no such crippled interdependent web of services. Neither are they overlapped - to each daemon, its task. And launchd didn't scrap all of them - it is just a system to unify daemons configuration and launching. Note that similar tools exist under Linux and the BSDs and that every major distribution features standardized configuration files. True, XML isn't used - but when working on a console environment, XML is not necessarily the most readable format out there.

      Do you know what happens on a Unix machine if your inittab file contains garbage data? The system refuses to boot! With XML configuration files, a config file that fails to validate will simply be ignored. The system will run in a degraded state until the file is corrected.

      And what if a critical service fails to start because of its malformed XML configuration file ? Excuse me, but your comparaison sounds rather biaised. The equivalent of "garbaging" one of the XML configuration files of launchd would be corrupting one of the /etc/init.d/ configuration scripts under Linux. This doesn't prevent the machine to boot at all - it simply means that the damaged service will not work.

      It's stuff like that. Yes, we're doing big-time flashy innovation with things like Core Data and Spotlight. Those are no-shit world-changing things. But we're not just glomming new services onto old infrastructure. We're evolving the operating syst

    60. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You consider the 10.0 release "recent"?

    61. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Surely their innovators can create even better engine? One that is alot faster, renders better etc. etc
      They did. They started with KHTML, tuned the hell out of it, and released the changes as open source. http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/hyatt/archives/2003 _12.html http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/hyatt/archives/2004 _02.html
    62. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
      Surely their innovators can create even better engine? One that is alot faster, renders better etc. etc. Why do they need KDE for it?
      Writing better engine isn't really what I would call innovation. There's not much point making a browser render faster these days as the speed up would be unnoticeable. There's also no point writing a better engine for Safari if it's already using the fatest of the bunch (see the benchmarks halfway down the page). And by using the KDE rendering engine Apple avoids the dreaded not invented here syndrome.
    63. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Lauwenmark · · Score: 1

      I don't see a single innovation in Linux. It's all taken from Windows, Mac OS X, Unix and others.

      Unix ? Which Unix ? Most of them already tend to use more and more of the software initially developed on Linux/BSDs. And most ideas implemented by either Windows or OSX aren't particularly new. At most, they were the first ones to implement them.

      I know that it's free, but I'm not in business so that's not a selling point to me.

      Neither am I. For *you*, money could not be an issue. But you see, the 120$ an OSX would cost me, I prefer spending them on a better screen. Or a better printer. See the (economical) point ?

      What is in Linux that I can't get anywhere else?

      Example: Show me how I can set up a software RAID5 with automated backup procedures under OSX or Windows without third-party tools.

      Of course, you'll probably tell me that no domestic user requires such entreprise features. Well, given the stability problems lots of domestic users encounter for various reasons, don't you think it would be a good selling point to tell them that their "my document" folder can be made much more robust and recoverable without them ever having to bother about it ? Would you dismiss it on the sole idea that this is a technology traditionally labeled as "entreprise feature" ? That's just one example of course - there are plenty others.

      It's not really their fault - they do it as a hobby, generally. But no-one is driving innovation in Linux. It's *stagnating*

      See, when I do something as a hobby, I tend to put much more into it than if I have to make it "because my boss said so". And most of those people working on the various Linux-related projects are like that. A lot are also professional graphists, designers, coders or administrators. Do not underestimate their technical and humane skills on the sole purpose that they are "doing it for fun". It really, really is unsulting for them.

    64. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by argent · · Score: 1

      it looks like NSToolbar has a gradient down from the top of the window in all cases, which looks nice - perhaps that's what you mean.

      Yeh, that's what I mean. That's really disturbing, because it's taking the Metal idea of merging the window content with the controls and having a fundamental difference in the appearance of different apps that has nothing to do with the application itself... it's taking that and bringing it into Aqua apps.

      I can't conceive how anyone can possibly consider this a good thing.

    65. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
      Majority of Linux-users do. As do *BSD-users. And those are the target-audiences of this tool. And I wouldn't be surprised if some distros offered binaries of it as well.
      Exactly. The majority of computer users are not Linux and *BSD users. Apple however have produced useful search functionality for the masses.
    66. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dashboard is a bunch of desktop widgets. Spotlight is Apple's new search technology. Sure both Spotlight and Beagle allow you to search stuff. But they are very different technologies underneath. Go back and read this post.

    67. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      It's just a bloody dropshadow.

      That's the point. It would have been so easy for them to get it right.

      Why?

      Because it makes your product look worse than it is --that's sort of being charitable here; it's entirely possible that the product really does suck and that a half-assed demo isn't doing it any harm --and because it misleads your customers.

    68. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      What was wrong with the old ones?

      They were ugly.

    69. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Do that, and it would work over ANY file system... not just HFS+.

      It does. You're uninformed. I'm gonna say it for what feels like the sixty-three millionth time: Go read the developer documentations.

      Well, I'd really like to run with UFS instead of HFS+ under me.

      There's absolutely no reason to do that. Zero. Zilch. None.

      Since then I've had several occasions where HFS got so corrupted that fsck_hfs couldn't fix it.

      That utility was deprecated two OS releases ago.

      Between "Here's a bunch of technical mumbo-jumbo that isn't remotely true" and "HFS Extended sucks for reasons related to a three-year-old utility that seem strangely to be unreproducible by anybody else" I'm starting to wonder if you're not what they call around here a "troll." I think you're just posting nonsense for the heck of it.

      Seriously: They're toolbar icons. If you don't like them, you're welcome to turn the toolbar off entirely, or to remove everything but the Spotlight search field. Whatever.

    70. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It showed that a cooperative development based on free will and open standards could lead to complex software projects

      Sorry, I guess I didn't get the memo. Was that ever in doubt?

      What this "cooperative development" thing cannot do is produce consistent results. Have there been success stories? You betcha. But they're so few and far between that all they really do is serve to emphasize the barrenness of the landscape between them.

      Linux is, for all intents and purposes, dead as anything other than a server operating system. And frankly it was dead as a server operating system until SGI came along and dragged it into the 21st century. It has one and only one advantage that keeps it hanging on: It'll run on leftover hardware. Got a PC from 1995 that you're not using for anything? Put Linux on it and use it to serve files. It won't be easy, but if you can get it to work at all, it'll work well. That's an important niche to occupy. But it's fundamentally a stagnant one.

      Linux contributed to bring several technologies that were only available on costly enterprise systems to the masses

      Let's be fair here. Linux hasn't contributed a damn thing. It can't, because of its license. Nobody can actually use Linux code for anything unless they're willing to give up commercial control of their project. Nobody is willing to do that.

      Want to talk about what the BSD guys contributed? Go right ahead. You'll get no argument from me. But Linux has contributed nothing. Rather, it cloned existing implementations and walled them off so nobody could actually build anything on them. Which I think goes a long way toward explaining why Linux has stagnated while Mac OS X has surged ahead. We can surge ahead because we're not constantly getting harassed by lawyers from the FSF.

      I find pretty sane to see developers asking themselves "How can we make that software easier to use ?" all the time.

      Sure it is. But it's not sane to ask those questions to the exclusion of other areas of advancement. Oh, sure, those guys are tweaking the background color of the file browser, but they're overlooking the completely fucked up font rendering architecture, or the essential inability to localize the system. That kind of thing.

      Linux isn't a "file-by-file" clone of Unix

      Sure it is. All the run-time programs are basically file-by-file copies of Unix programs: init, inetd, the various networking daemons, all the command-line tools. Over the years people have sat down and copied Unix --Unix from the 1970s, remember -- file by file like the monks of old, dutifully reproducing everything even if it's just obviously stupid, like the init/inetd/cron/init.d/rc disaster.

      And launchd didn't scrap all of them - it is just a system to unify daemons configuration and launching. Note that similar tools exist under Linux and the BSDs and that every major distribution features standardized configuration files.

      Maybe you don't understand what launchd is. The launchd program replaces six entire subsystems. It gets rid entirely of init, rc, init.d, SystemStarter, cron and inetd. Makes them go away. No, no similar tools exist on another operating system.

      And what if a critical service fails to start because of its malformed XML configuration file ?

      Define "critical." We're talking about the difference between a bootable configuration and a non-bootable configuration here. On Linux, if init fails to start, the computer cannot be accessed by anybody, anywhere, via any method. One typo in the init configuration file can render the computer completely non-functional.

      There's no such problem with launchd. If some configuration file gets fat-fingered, the service described by that file won't start. Maybe you'll be without SSH access, or without Open Directory. But the system will be running, and the problem can be fixed.

      One of the features we've built into the preferences

    71. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1
      Biggest problem with Linux is they are largely stuck on emmulate and immiate not innovate.

      Linux is a clone of Unix. Most of the GUI interfaces have options like "Look like XP or Look like OSX".

      Linux was a useful stepping stone for me make in 1999 to learn the basic concepts of a *iux world. However, in 2002 I bought a Mac, haven't loaded Linux since.

      Folks in Linux will come back a year later and say, "See, we made Linux now do what OSX can, or XP can". By that time Apple's realeased another 200 new features, granted some better than others.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    72. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by argent · · Score: 1

      That utility was deprecated two OS releases ago.

      So Disk Utility doesn't call "fsck_hfs" to do the heavy lifting any more, the fact that it looks like it's getting its output from that is purely concidence, and the fact that "/System/Library/Filesystems/hfs.fs/Contents/Info. plist"
      contains "FSRepairExecutable" set to "fsck_hfs" and "FSRepairArguments" set to "-y" doesn't mean it's doing the same thing as I do when I boot to single user mode and run the same command?

      Glad you cleared that up.

      You're uninformed. Go read the developer documentations.

      Spotlight's performance depends on HFS+ ability to locate recently changed files (specifically, btree searches for filesystem metadata). On any other file system it has to depend on an exhaustive search of the file system, which means it's restricted to the same periodic scan of the file system that every other search engine (such as Harvest) uses, and so the big advantage you get from Spotlight as compared to other tools vanishes.

      If I'm wrong, if I can change some random file off in the filesystem and depend on Spotlight indexing that change just as quickly whether it's on HFS+ or UFS, then I'd love to know about it. Can you give me a URL?

    73. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by CDarklock · · Score: 1

      > every single one of us, to a man,
      > would be ashamed to show something
      > like that in public.

      You know, the Microsoft approach reminds me of children doing cool things for the first time. "Hey! Hey, lookit! See, you click this... and that happens! Hee hee!" *claps hands* "Wait, wait, watch this! Lookit!" *click* "Isn't that COOL?!"

      Hey, call me simple, but I *like* that. When some Linux jerk comes out and starts puffing up his chest about three years of uptime, he's just a jerk. When some Apple jerk comes out and starts gloating over how Apple did this first and that first and it's so much prettier, he's just a jerk. And, yes, when a Microsoft jerk comes out and says Microsoft makes bunches of money so they must be right -- he's just a jerk.

      But Bill and his posse aren't jerks. They're geeks. They think this is cool. And I like that.

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
    74. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by drew · · Score: 1

      except WinFS was not (so far as i'm aware) in any of the actually released betas for winXP.

      i remember using an active desktop-like feature in an IE 4 beta release that not only never made it into IE4, but was horribly neutered when it did finally make it into later windows/IE releases as active desktop.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    75. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      What bothers me is the big fat grey border around all the windows using the 'brushed metal' UI.

      Having a border along 1, 2, or 4 edges of a window is ideal in different circumstances. I don't think think having 4 is a property of the brushed metal interface. Safari, for example has borders only on the top and bottom. I really like the brushed metal because the color and texture works well for me. The contents of most of my windows are primarily either black or white. Gray is a good, color that does not blend with either nor clash with any color.

    76. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      Writing better engine isn't really what I would call innovation.


      They can innovate inside that engine. Fact is that for all their "innovation", Apple relies heavily on those no-good open-source coders. Samba, GCC, KHTML etc. etc.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    77. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      The majority of computer users are not Linux and *BSD users.


      And majority of computer-users are not OS X users. So what's your point?

      pple however have produced useful search functionality for the masses.


      The "massses" of OS X-users are about as large as number of Linux-users. You could say that right now the number of potential Beagle-users is about as big as number of potential Spotlight-users is.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    78. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Herkules · · Score: 1

      What normal user would touch inittab or /etc/rc.d/rc ? rc is a bash script that runs other sript files =)

      I mean please you inovate by removing the possibility to hack your boot scripts ?

      Are you trying to say that to inovation is that you use xml or that you one program to parse the XML files ?

      Also what is this Open directory ? Might it be anything like openLDAP ?

      Please boast what Apple dose great! Make good implementation's of good ideas.

      "But that's exactly what I'm telling you. The criticism is just plain wrong. We're changing that world with that model; Linux languishes like a big fish in a rapidly evaporating pond."

      You must be blind or very new to computers! I have been using Linux sins 96, and the truth is that every year Linux gets more and more users, and more and more real world applications.

      --
      CIA Factbook 2002 (US):"Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households
    79. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by delete · · Score: 1

      I think he means that the number of potential users who could startup OSX and begin using the search functionality provided by spotlight is significantly larger than the number of people who can download, compile and install the latest version of Beagle and all its dependencies.

      As a Linux user I can say from experience that Beagle is currently not ready to be used by anyone but geeks with plenty of time on their hands. I'm sure it'll improve, but Spotlight definitely got there first.

    80. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      What normal user would touch inittab or /etc/rc.d/rc ?

      None. Which is why they don't need to be there.

      I mean please you inovate by removing the possibility to hack your boot scripts ?

      Which way do you want to play this? Do you want to go with the "I want to edit them, therefore it's possible to screw them up, which is lame" approach, or the "Nobody wants to edit them, so removing them is no big improvement" approach? I can go either way. Just pick one.

      Also what is this Open directory ? Might it be anything like openLDAP ?

      Oh boy. I'm gonna go ahead and point out at this time that the mere fact that you have to ask the question is evidence that you're a little too far out of the loop to be complaining.

      Open Directory is what we created to replace all those cryptic configuration files in the /etc directory: hosts, passwd, group, protocols, services, fstab, exports and so forth and so. It's a systemwide configuration service. It used to be called NetInfo, but two years ago we did a pretty massive rewrite and changed the name to Open Directory.

      I have been using Linux sins 96, and the truth is that every year Linux gets more and more users, and more and more real world applications.

      Rock on, dude. Don't let the fact that Linux is so far away from the current state of the art that you've never even heard of it get you down.

    81. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
      And majority of computer-users are not OS X users. So what's your point?

      ...

      You could say that right now the number of potential Beagle-users is about as big as number of potential Spotlight-users is.
      Wrong. The audience of potential Beagle users are Linux savvy people who can compile source code and are willing to invest time in running a Linux system. The audience of potential Spotlight users is anyone who can drop enough money to buy a Mac. Beagle is currently useless to the average computer user.
    82. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by garote · · Score: 1
      True - Safari has only a border along the top, and the border along the bottom can be hidden entirely. That's a Good Thing, because the bottom border is also the "status bar", which conveys useful information in a place I've grown to expect it (From using Mozilla, Netscape, etc).

      What's irked me about brushed metal is the other uses for which it is employed around the OS. In the past I thought there was a definite pattern to it's usage: Any application that is providing an interface into a database, instead of rendered content from external (possibly multiple) documents, has the metal border. The thicker border is meant to underscore the separation between the data embedded in the app, and the "outside world" so to speak.

      That's not a definition I just pulled out of my ass: It makes conceptual sense and fits the pattern for iTunes, iPhoto, Remote Desktop, iSync, Sherlock, iCal, Keychain Access, Font Book, AND the Address Book. The contents of each of these apps is _meant_ to be managed through the app, not as a series of separate documents. Multi-document or document-rendering programs do not use metal - like Safari, Pages, Stickies, TextEdit, Terminal, and the Console.

      The problem is, the metaphor has been slapped silly by inconsistencies, some arbitrary, some inevitable because the separation between a multi-document situation and a database situation is not clear. iMovie, iDVD, KeyNote, THE FINDER, etc.

      BUT. Even if the metaphor were perfectly clear, and perfectly applied in all situations, the big grey non-functional border at the edge of the various apps I use daily is taking up valuable space. Why in the hell does the Finder have grey metal on the SIDES of every window, for example? How come it all vanishes when I hide the TOOLBAR of all things, but NOT THE SIDEBAR? At least apps with drawers could have the drawers hidden! (rant rant, rave rave, et cereta).

    83. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1

      Give me an example. What can they possibly innovate in the engine? It renders HTML and CSS as prescribed by the W3C specifications at a more than acceptable speed. It doesn't need to do anything else. By taking advantage of an existing rendering engine, Apple a free to spend time innovate elsewhere, like integrating RSS support directly into the browser.

    84. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously don't work for Apple, as we'd have already sniffed you out and had you fired for your deliberate misinformation campaign here on Slashdot (never mind the fact that you've spent the entire day here posting your lies).

      Better luck next time! And please, for the love of all that's holy, Get A Life!

      -Another Actual Apple Employee Who Knows What He's Talking About

    85. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1
      What was wrong with the old ones?

      They were ugly.


      But that's the problem with the new ones!

      Geh, agree to disagree.
    86. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As Seen must be a real Slashdot celebrity now. He's got his own trolls.

    87. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by zr-rifle · · Score: 1

      >Surely their innovators can create even better engine? One that is alot faster, renders better etc. etc. Why do they need KDE for it?

      Now, don't be arrogant yourself. Like what he said, a TCP /IP stack is more or less similiar to a rendering engine. Take, as an example, the wheel: cars are faster, better looking, etc etc... so why do they need a carriages wheel? It was a sensible choice that Apple made by supporting the OSS movement and freeing their thinktanks for something else that really need it.

      I agree with you on the fact that he completely fails to understand what Linux is all about, since he can't identify what Linux is in the first place. So, "As seen on TV"...

      - Are you talking about the Linux kernel? Then to what user inteface are you referring to, "make menuconfig"???
      - Or is it the so called "operating system"? In that case you'd call it GNU/Linux, since it is both the kernel and open-source software running on top of it - think Samba and GNU/GCC, which benefit from all the work that the Linux users and developers poured into it.

      - And what about the user interface? Do you mean KDE or GNOME, both also available for FreeBSD? Are you then suggesting that FreeBSD also sucks? I hope not, or you'd be better off quitting your job. By the way, what about the Brushed Metal interface? I'd say that was ripped off from Enlightenment - circa 1996 (http://www.enlightenment.org).

      One last remark: in the server world, where Linux is still king for quite a number of reasons, a bootstrap sequence that doesn't abort and continues in degraded mode can spell a lot of trouble. Picture this scenario, not totally uncommon these days in production environments: your machine is part of a cluster in controlled load-balancing. Acceptable status is "online and functional" or "offline and non functional". "Online and in fuzzy degraded mode" is something that a sysadmin doesn't want to hear, since that's the exact sound of a load of cow dung hitting a fan.Think erratic load distribution. Think ARP poisoning. When Apple will provide a version of Mac OS-X server that handles all of these possible pictures then you'll manage to get rid of the IT guys (and Linux as well). Until then, good luck.

      --
      Hack your mind out of its sandbox.
    88. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Terrasque · · Score: 1

      Yeah, as you guessed, I meant spotlight.

      Lets compare a little:

      Beagle is a content-indexing system similar to what every other operating system has.
      And it extracts some metadata. And aint spotlight basically the same?

      the kernel-integration part ... file operations trigger import tasks.
      You mean like how beage use inotify in the kernel?

      Spotlight is shipping. Now. Released. Working. In actual production.
      And Suse ships with Beage in version 9.3... which is already out, and have been for a time.

      About query language and plugin support. Yeah, ok, beage doesn't have those .. Yet.

      But if you call those two groundshaking innovative and otherworldly superior I'm gonna whack you with a rubber duck.

      I still haven't seen the significantly large difference between those two that everyone else apparently sees.

      --
      It's The Golden Rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules."
    89. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Lauwenmark · · Score: 1

      Linux is, for all intents and purposes, dead as anything other than a server operating system.

      Facts currently seem to go against that proposal. Maybe you should have a look at their current market shares on the fields outside servers. Definitely, they'll not be the leading system on the desktop market any time soon - but neither is OSX.

      Nobody can actually use Linux code for anything unless they're willing to give up commercial control of their project. Nobody is willing to do that.

      IBM, Novell, Oracle or HP are thus probably suddenly getting mad and are sinking themselves at investing money for both free and commercial projects around the Linux platform... Not to be rude, but I frankly think that you should get a little more informed on how the software business is now running - we aren't in 1980 anymore.

      We can surge ahead because we're not constantly getting harassed by lawyers from the FSF.

      Court action of the FSF against commercial products are pretty rare and only involve cases where licence was unilaterally broken (which is illegal). May I remind you how many patents and NDA issues Apple or Microsoft already conducted in the past ? Check your facts before spreading unfounded rumors, please.

      But it's not sane to ask those questions to the exclusion of other areas of advancement. Oh, sure, those guys are tweaking the background color of the file browser, but they're overlooking the completely fucked up font rendering architecture, or the essential inability to localize the system. That kind of thing.

      Font rendering works perfectly under X for quite some time already, thanks, with network-aware font management as an extra. As for the system localization, it is also perfectly working, both with local codepages or Unicode formats. Of course, there are applications that are not localized - but the base system and all the common desktop tools are. Again, I urge you to check your facts before arguing.

      Sure it is. All the run-time programs are basically file-by-file copies of Unix programs: init, inetd, the various networking daemons, all the command-line tools. Over the years people have sat down and copied Unix --Unix from the 1970s, remember -- file by file like the monks of old, dutifully reproducing everything even if it's just obviously stupid, like the init/inetd/cron/init.d/rc disaster.

      *sigh*... inetd appeared with BSD 4.3 at the end of the eighties. Cron was written in 1987 by Paul Vixie. I see no 1970s in that.

      May I also remind you that launchd does not replace cron ? Quoting OSNews on this:
      Traditionally the cron daemon is always running, whether or not there are any jobs to run. Now, launchd watches /var/cron/tabs. If there aren't any files in that directory (i.e. there are no user cronjobs configured) then cron isn't running. When a file does appear in that directory, cron automatically starts running.

      Maybe you don't understand what launchd is.

      I am happy to notice that the people of OSNews are apparently as ignorant as I am.

      There's no such problem with launchd.

      Destroy launchd configuration for critical services, and you'll get the same result. Note that it is not an attack against launchd - just the fact that without the valid configuration of the boot-critical systems, you'll never get the thing to start up, being Windows, OSX or Linux.

      If inittab or /etc/rc are damaged, a Linux system can't boot at all.

      Damaging one of the /etc/rcX isn't sufficient to prevent Linux from booting.

      we've rolled out massive innovation in Tiger.

      I never denied that OSX made great progresses in various fields. But so did Linux or the BSDs.

      Hell, even Bonjour (née Rendezvous). That's a world-changer. We took an idea that was frankly languishing, turned it into an actual specification and used it to change

    90. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you've got it backwards--As Seen On TV *is the troll here*. Do a little fact checking, and you can see that what he has to say has very little to do with anything resembling the truth. He's a karma whore and a troll and you all are suckers for buying into this jackass's bullshit.

    91. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Your comment was a long, long, long list of incorrect statements and non sequiturs.

      Maybe you should have a look at their current market shares on the fields outside servers.

      Last month, our number was 3.6% of sales. Linux' was 1.1%. Gartner.

      Of course, every time we actually look at the statistics, somebody hauls out the "But you can't count Linux!" thing. So what's the point of even going there?

      Besides, I wasn't talking about rates of adoption. I was talking about rates of innovation. Linux has been utterly stagnant for five years now. Nobody's improving it. We're rolling out stuff like Open Directory, Core Data, Quartz, Spotlight, and so on and so on, stuff that makes an actual difference. With Linux ...not so much.

      IBM, Novell, Oracle or HP are thus probably suddenly getting mad and are sinking themselves at investing money for both free and commercial projects around the Linux platform

      As a matter of fact, they are, yes. That's why IBM has recently become a tier-1 Apple developer; Oracle already was. HP resells our products, for crying out loud! And Novell? Well, nobody's ever accused Novell of being on the front of the technology curve.

      Court action of the FSF against commercial products are pretty rare and only involve cases where licence was unilaterally broken (which is illegal).

      Define "pretty rare." Every couple of weeks there's a story in the technology trades about another company getting accused of some heinous crime by the Gnu people.

      Font rendering works perfectly under X for quite some time already

      Um. No. Have you seen it? I mean actually looked at it? Looks like crap. There's this wonderful new technology that you guys might be interested in. It's called "electronic kerning." It's brand new; it was only invented about ... um ...forty years ago. You should totally check it out.

      As for the system localization, it is also perfectly working, both with local codepages or Unicode formats.

      I'm not talking about keyboard input or character sets. I'm talking about localization. You know, the ability to have your program switch from an English user interface to an Arabic or a Hebrew or a Farsi or a Chinese user interface based on the user's system-wide language preference. Linux has no facility for doing that, which is kind of okay, because if it did, there would be no facility for Linux applications to actually have localization built into them.

      May I also remind you that launchd does not replace cron ?

      Maybe you should read that quote again. No more cron, is what it says. The launchd service has replaced it.

      Do we executed cron-style configuration files as a backwards-compatibility feature? Sure. But cron is no more. It doesn't run.

      Destroy launchd configuration for critical services, and you'll get the same result.

      Nope. If you remote all of launchd's configuration files, every last one up to and including the optional /etc/launchd.conf, the system will boot just fine. You can't render the system unbootable by screwing with launchd. Which is a big part of the reason for its existence.

      Damaging one of the /etc/rcX isn't sufficient to prevent Linux from booting.

      Try it sometime. You'll be unpleasantly surprised.

      I never denied that OSX made great progresses in various fields. But so did Linux or the BSDs.

      Money where your mouth is. Here's a totally random list of technologies, pulled right out of my head, that we've built into Mac OS X over the past six years, or that we've substantially improved since the NeXT days. Where's your comparable list for Linux?

      Accessibility (we have systemwide services for people with vision and motor disabilities)

      Cocoa (an Objective-C-based development environment that makes it possible to turn out first-class applic

    92. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > We can surge ahead because we're not constantly getting harassed by lawyers from the FSF.

      Stop embarassing your employer. Beeing an apple zaelot is ok. Working at apple is ok.

      Pretending talking for apple is not so ok.

      Spreading shit onto other while pretending talking for your employer is bad.

      localhost:~ me$ gcc -v
      Reading specs from /usr/libexec/gcc/darwin/ppc/3.3/specs
      Thread model: posix
      gcc version 3.3 20030304 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 1666)

      Please shut up. Apple stopped innovated in the late 80's. NeXT innovated in the 90's and now changed its name to Apple.

      And you should thanks the free software community for all the thing they gave to NeXT.

    93. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Lauwenmark · · Score: 1

      Um. No. Have you seen it? I mean actually looked at it? Looks like crap. There's this wonderful new technology that you guys might be interested in. It's called "electronic kerning." It's brand new; it was only invented about ... um ...forty years ago. You should totally check it out.

      Kerning is supported in X font renderers. Stop spreading false informations. Go read the docs, please.

      Damaging one of the /etc/rcX isn't sufficient to prevent Linux from booting.

      Try it sometime. You'll be unpleasantly surprised.


      That's what I did. I did even more - I removed the /etc/rcX directories completely. Guess what ? I still got console access. You are loosing credibility each time, you should stop speaking about what you don't know.

      Every couple of weeks there's a story in the technology trades about another company getting accused of some heinous crime by the Gnu people.

      That's quite different from "being harrassed by lawyers".

      I'm not talking about keyboard input or character sets. I'm talking about localization. You know, the ability to have your program switch from an English user interface to an Arabic or a Hebrew or a Farsi or a Chinese user interface based on the user's system-wide language preference. Linux has no facility for doing that, which is kind of okay, because if it did, there would be no facility for Linux applications to actually have localization built into them.

      Go make some research about terms like the environment variables LANG, LC_LOCAL, i18n and i10n. I am also sure you'll find websites like http://i18n.kde.org/ worth reading.

      Beg pardon? Are you saying that because Linux users are totally happy to live in a world where every computer and peripheral has to be configured by hand (an assertion which I totally dispute), that Bonjour was no big deal?

      Network autoconfiguration tools existed for a long time before Rendezvous. You didn't need to "manually configure everything" on the client machine. The goal of ZeroConf was to provide a way to do it (for network services) without the need of a server.

      But cron is no more. It doesn't run.

      Quoting the same article again: When a file does appear in that directory, cron automatically starts running.

      Accessibility
      See for example http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Accessibility-HOWTO/

      Cocoa
      See for example GNUStep.

      I could continue by taking your list point by point. I could also talk about virtualization (Xen), data security (Encrypted mounts, distributed fs, software raid), remote management (webmin), portability, high-level portable development APIs (SDL, GTK), networked installation, dependency-aware software installation (apt), on-site optimization (gentoo), support for handheld devices (uCLinux), free and native Java compilation (gcj), abstract data management (kio), mass storage virtualization (LVM)... But you wouldn't probably listen anyway.

      Come back after you have informed yourself better about both the various operating systems available today. You'll understand that not only Linux and BSDs aren't as late as you'd like to see it, but also that their existence contributed to improve the overall quality of software in general. And in the meantime, let the Linux and OSX fans debate on sane grounds and exchange ideas on what computing would mean in the future - this proved much more productive than blindly uninformed bashing.

    94. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being a zaelot is okay? Oh, thank god. We're all so relieved to hear that.

      Hang on, I have to go perform a degrading sex act on Richard Stallman now because some penishead on the Internet told me to. Does anybody have a condom and a towel?

    95. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Kerning is supported in X font renderers. Stop spreading false informations.

      I'm sure that's true. But it ain't workin'. Go look for yourself. Type Wo or Ya or Tu and tell me that they look right to you. Get somebody to fix it and I will happily stop spreading false informations.

      I removed the /etc/rcX directories completely

      That's fine. I was talking about /etc/rc, though, not the scripts under /etc/rc.d. When you typed "/etc/rcX," I was confused about what you meant. Sorry about that.

      If you hose /etc/rc or /etc/inittab, your system will not boot. Jacking with init scripts like /etc/rc.d and /etc/init.d and other service config files like /etc/crontab will result in other run-time errors, but they probably won't be system-fatal.

      That's quite different from "being harrassed by lawyers".

      So if it were just the torch-and-pitchfork-waving Internet mob and not Moglen and his cadre of fanatics, that would somehow be okay with you?

      I am also sure you'll find websites like http://i18n.kde.org/ worth reading.

      Yes, I certainly did. The lesson? You have a very, very long way to go. I mean come on. Environment variables? And four different ones at that?

      In order to localize, you have to adapt not just the UI language, but the number and currency formats, date and time formats, the system calendar and measurement units. For example, if you pick up your computer and move it to Tel Aviv, you have to switch the language to Hebrew and the writing system to right-to-left. You have to use the Hebrew calendar instead of the Gregorian calendar. You have to use 24-hour time instead of 12-hour time. You do get to continue to use the ###,###.## number format, but you have to switch currency units to the new sheqel and units of measurement to metric.

      That's localization. Linux can't even approximate it yet.

      Network autoconfiguration tools existed for a long time before Rendezvous.

      You know we're not talking about DHCP here, right? We're talking about the fact that the routing table dynamically reconfigures itself based on available interfaces via configd. We're talking about the fact that if you're currently using your AirPort card and you plug in to an Ethernet port, all your services will invisibly move over to the new port instantly without interruption.

      Beyond that, yes, we have Bonjour. Which, incidentally, we give away for free in a POSIX-compliant reference implementation on our Web site.

      The goal of ZeroConf was to provide a way to do it (for network services) without the need of a server.

      And that would have been really cool, had anybody actually done anything about it. Nobody did until we came along. We took the Zeroconf spec and turned it into Rendezvous, which thanks to a trademark settlement is now Bonjour. In the process, we built it into everything, created a compliance logo program for it, and distributed reference implementations to vendors. Now Bonjour is built into every network printer ... thanks to us.

      Quoting the same article again: When a file does appear in that directory, cron automatically starts running.

      I've lost track of which article you're quoting. But believe me, okay? I'm sitting in front of a computer with Tiger right this very second. The cron daemon is not running.

      See for example http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Accessibility-HOWTO/

      How is a blind person supposed to read a lengthy tutorial? Aside from that, the document you refer to consists of a lengthy list of third-party work-arounds for services that should be a core part of the operating system. Should be? No, in this case, they have to be. It's a bootstrap probl

    96. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      *munches popcorn*
      *anxiously awaits another response*
      *munches popcorn*

    97. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      ASOTV: Look, you stupid bastard. You've got no arms left.
      Lauwenmark: Yes, I have.
      ASOTV: Look!
      Lauwenmark: Just a flesh wound.
      [...]
      Lauwenmark: I'm invincible!
      ASOTV: You're a looney.

    98. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey Apple fanboi! How's the view from under Steve Jobs desk?

    99. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      Let's be fair here. Linux hasn't contributed a damn thing. It can't, because of its license. Nobody can actually use Linux code for anything unless they're willing to give up commercial control of their project. Nobody is willing to do that.
      Ok, you're an anti-GPL zealot. But, FWIW, it isn't commercial control you give up by using Linux and other GPL'd code in your software, it's proprietary control. You can't keep secrets, you can't prevent others from building on your code.

      Kind of like most of us if we use APSL code. Ooops! Did I just say that? I seem to recall you saying somewhere that Apple is contributing things like launchd because they're Open Source, but if we use them we're bound by the same rules as the GPL too, except with one difference: we have to allow Apple to screw us.

      Damn you're an inconsistant ass!

      Sure it is. All the run-time programs are basically file-by-file copies of Unix programs: init, inetd, the various networking daemons, all the command-line tools. Over the years people have sat down and copied Unix --Unix from the 1970s, remember -- file by file like the monks of old, dutifully reproducing everything even if it's just obviously stupid, like the init/inetd/cron/init.d/rc disaster.
      There are multiple ways of implementing GNU/Linux and really very few are exact clones of any of the versions of Unix that existed in the 1970s. Take a look in /etc, for example, and you'll find precisely zero binaries. Yes, many innovations that made it to Unix in the 1980s also made it into GNU, but the same is true of OS X.

      OS X is as much a Unix clone as GNU/Linux. Some decisions are clearly better, some are worse (XML for everything including configuration files for fuck's sake? And don't get started with that "Validation BS", that'd be true if you hadn't decided to make the actual property names values so you could easily serialize property lists. You can't validate a plist with a regular XML library any more usefully than you can validate a CSV file with grep. So all we have at the end of the day is an object parsable with an XML library, but not parsable from the shell or in C (not C++) or God-knows what else. Gee, thanks.)

      This really is two faced. "You should use OS X, which is open source and just like Unix so we're sharing all our code on a share and share alike license, rather than GNU/Linux with all of its Unixisms and it's horrible forces-you-to-share license." Wow. Great argument there. Next time, try arguing about something like specific improvements and features you think are better done, rather than throwing around mindless allegations that are generally bogus and apply as much to your product as the one you're complaining about.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    100. Re:Shadows in the shadow world by ZigMonty · · Score: 1
      ... "high level" APIs that wouldn't look the least bit out of place in 1989.

      Damn straight. To me, Quartz Composer is a "high level" API. Drag and drop visual programming, with the ability to delve into custom shader code if needed.

  46. To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MS has been working on Longhorn even longer than they worked on Windows 95. So its appropriate to comment on the state of the beta after billions of dollars of work over a long period of time.

    After 4 years, if this is all they can show, then I'm buying stock in Apple, because if MS attempts to "lock down" digital "rights", then people will be sprinting towards the Mac platform just as fast as they can to get away from this abortion of an OS.

    1. Re:To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, that crap is just one more thing that has been cut out of Longhorn:

      http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/secu ri ty/story/0,10801,101332,00.html

      At the current pace they are going to run out of stuff to cut out of Longhorn and will have to start removing features from existing Windows XP copies...

      "Not only am I not learning, I'm forgetting stuff I used to know."

    2. Re:To be fair by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Insightful

      if MS attempts to "lock down" digital "rights", then people will be sprinting towards the Mac platform just as fast as they can

      Sure - sprinting to buy a whole new computer, new set of applications, new games, etc just so something that they don't understand or even know about isn't part of their OS.

    3. Re:To be fair by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      I think by "people" he meant "my friends and other members of my peer group."

    4. Re:To be fair by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

      Digital media is one of the most important uses a lot of folks have for their computers, and Microsoft's competitors (Apple and Linux) come with a much wider set of software components than Windows does out of the box. I don't think that you have to stretch your imagination too far to imagine people purchasing a new Mac or a PC loaded with Linux instead of a new PC loaded with Longhorn. Especially if Microsoft goes out of its way to make their operating system less useful to people.

      Yes, the gamers will probably be on Windows for some time to come, assuming, of course, that the next generation consoles don't finish PC gaming once and for all. However, that doesn't mean that there won't be defections.

    5. Re:To be fair by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      The only applications for mac that aren't free is photoshop and office. There aren't any games for mac; it's a pretty cheap conversion. Most people just download open office or neo office until they're forced to purchase a copy of MS office for whatever reason (file compatibility, whatever), but we all have to upgrade at some point.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    6. Re:To be fair by killjoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You never know. IF they can't play the music they already paid for or watch the movies they already paid for or play some cute foreign commercial their friend sent them, then it could happen.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    7. Re:To be fair by Pecisk · · Score: 1

      Why new set of applications?

      Let's check.

      Microsoft Office 2004? Yeah, it is for Mac.
      Games? Most popular ones are coming to Mac rather quickly.
      What is etc? Stuff that works? Lot of it already has sexy, stylish OS X apps like iCal, Mail, Address Book, iWork (super word editor, I love it). For flowchars use OmniGraffle - that's super.

      Believe me - when people start to feel when they're pissed off, they are doing rather serious stuff to change that state of things.

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    8. Re:To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the next generation of councils will be computers them selves pretty much. Hell 2 generations from know I bet you any thing you won't be able to tell the differnece from an Xbox and Dell PC.

    9. Re:To be fair by Cromac · · Score: 1
      Windows 95 had millions of lines fewer code too. The initial Win95 install (pre IE) would only consume 50 meg of drive space, Longhorn will probably have to suck in it's gut to get below 2 gig.

      It is a disapointing show for 4 years of tweaking to an existing product though.

    10. Re:To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "buying all new games" issue only applies to non-Blizzard games :)

    11. Re:To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty soon windows will be as devoid of features as osx.

    12. Re:To be fair by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Microsoft Office 2004? Yeah, it is for Mac.

      Wow, I never knew you could flip the installer CDs upside down to access the Mac version! Kudos to Microsoft for pre-emptively supporting cross-platform users.

    13. Re:To be fair by drew · · Score: 1

      Most people only upgrade windows when they buy a new computer anyway, so it's not all that far fetched. Especially when you consider that most games are 'obsolete' every few months anyways, and usually new major releases of the appications most people use are also timed around new windows releases.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    14. Re:To be fair by SunFan · · Score: 1

      When it comes down to convenience or price or 'cool factor', most home PC users have no loyalty. Just look how many people switched to Windows 95 in droves, even though it broke lots of apps. Apple successfully moved to Mac OS X, which was a gigantic change. People moved en masse from UNIX to Windows NT in the 1990s (as big a change as it gets).

      --
      -- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
    15. Re:To be fair by SunFan · · Score: 1


      The next generation of computers could very well be thin clients. The key factor being "zero administration".

      --
      -- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
    16. Re:To be fair by KillShill · · Score: 1

      as if apple (lets appease the RIAA with DRM in itunes) will not jump on the bandwagon.

      you're fooling yourself if you think otherwise.

      eventually they will be locked out of more and more services/sites/etc. or it will be mandated by law, as if that hasn't happened already.

      the only real solution is to stop them at the social level, because technologically, they have the advantage.

      and btw, moving from one proprietary system (windows) to another (mac) is not the smart thing to do by any stretch of the imagination.

      if one truly wants freedom, they'll go to gnu\linux or write their own system (or do without computing).

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    17. Re:To be fair by rokzy · · Score: 1

      >There aren't any games for mac

      er, yes there are. lots. most popular games get a mac port unless something specific stops it eg. need to use Steam and DX for HL2.

      and those that focus on gameplay rahter than graphics are often released as dual-platform single-release eg. Football Manager (Championship Manager 5+).

    18. Re:To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Wow, I never knew you could flip the installer CDs upside down to access the Mac version!

      you didn't? what kind of retard are you? it was written right there in bold letters in the installation guide.

    19. Re:To be fair by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      I have a powerbook. I have zero games loaded on my computer. Why? the video card in laptops (about half the computers apple sells) are significantly less powerful than their desktop counterparts. Unless you've bought a mac in the last two years, you can't really play any modern games on it. I own Q1,2,3A, civ 3, & tropico for the mac. All but the last play just fine, but I wouldn't call any of them modern. Most of the computers capable of playing modern games at acceptable speeds/resolution are the pro machines, which are largely bought for professional shops.

      yes, there are games, but most people don't have the horsepower to take advantage of the ones out there.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    20. Re:To be fair by rokzy · · Score: 1

      I have an iBook that's a few months old and I have a few games on it, including the brand-new Football Manager.

      I'm not really bothered about games, my iBook is for work, but I have them just in case. the point is if you want games they are there.

      the argument about having to have bought a mac in the last 2 years is kinda weak. my 2 year old PC is struggling with modern games.

    21. Re:To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To say that a game "needs" DirectX is to say that a fish needs a bicycle. A more accurate description is, "they're bad programmers," or perhaps, "too stupid to know how to port."

    22. Re:To be fair by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      most mac owners keep their macs a lot longer than 2 years (the number i hear being thrown around most is 5), PCs are upgraded every 2 years or so. if the 5 year number is at all correct, then half of all mac users are below the "respectible gaming performance" curve.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    23. Re:To be fair by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      "if MS attempts to "lock down" digital "rights", then people will be sprinting towards the Mac platform just as fast as they can"

      Because, as we know, Apple's products are 100% DRM-free. And Apple has threatened sued anyone over violation of the DMCA.

      Give it a rest.

    24. Re:To be fair by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Yes, it could, if it really starts to become a problem. I can't see MS allowing it to get to that stage though - if there's one thing they are undeniably good at, it's making money. Pissing your customers off so much that they stop buying your products doesn't make you any money.

      Besides which, I think the average user still tends to watch movies on their TV (with a DVD player, etc), listen to CDs on their hifis, etc. *If* it happens, it'll piss off people like you an me, but people like you and me are most decidedly not the average user.

  47. I can't believe it by Rollie+Hawk · · Score: 1

    Longhorn Beta is Disappointing I, for one, am shocked. Shocked not only that Microsoft failed to deliver ont this beta but that such blatant anti-M$ rhetoric made its way onto SlashDot. Okay, just kidding. But in all seriousness, this shouldn't be a surprise. A version of Windows is generally not out of beta testing until SP2 for all practical purposes.

    --
    Before any liberals are tempted to mod up one of my comments, a word of warning: I'm actually making fun of you.
  48. Its funny, not a troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    N/T
    .
    .
    .

  49. Nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The worst insult you can throw at an OS these days is "its as bad as Windows ME". Even non-tech people nod in sage agreement.

  50. I'm not totally Microsoft fan.. by Pecisk · · Score: 1

    ..and no, nor I waiting for Longhorn nor hyping about it. In fact, I'm free software advocat and active GNOME user and developer. But whole article smells for flamebat mod point, because it will only anger Windows users. It could use more calm language for setting tone for discusion.

    I hate to see any flame wars because they are, well, worthless. Longhorn is still two years at least away. When normal product will come out then we could disscuss this.

    --
    user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
  51. No, that would be release candidate year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, Longhorn is late and it might suck. And so that's trolling or flamebait?

    Gimme a friggin' break.

    1. Re:No, that would be release candidate year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Might?

  52. Quick summary of the the review here on slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not L[u|i]n*x, cannot run under an iMAC, not open source, and MADE BY MICROSOFT!

    BOOOOOOO!

    Grade: F-

  53. Longhorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What's that? oh, it's that OS you have to pay for...

    *Goes back to programming his final project in Anjuta in XFce*

    I have a feeling we'll be seeing a lot more of this spoon-fed Microsoft buzz in the next year, until Longhorn is finally released. I'm shutting off my Microsoft stories now :) See ya all in a year.

    1. Re:Longhorn? by DoorFrame · · Score: 1

      No, it's the program that's going to be essentially free (or if not free, then the price will be so intermixed with the price of the computer as to be irrelevent) and already installed on my next laptop. And, quite probably, yours. It's still not an easy task to buy a computer without an OS.

      Good luck, though.

  54. screenshots by gardyloo · · Score: 1

    It's just because those screenshots show that the default wallpaper looks like a prison fence. Sobibor, anyone?

  55. Re:Comparison by Kethinov · · Score: 1
    Compared to Linux, Longhorn is a fantastic (I mean everything about it.. security, UI, features, ease of use).
    Exactly how is Longhorn more secure than Linux?
    --
    You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
  56. Disappointing is subjective by Twillerror · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The slogan is very subject and so incomplete.

    John Smith calls Longhorn disappointing would have been better.

    Essentially slashdot turned a story that should have been called "New longhorn build/screenshots" into major flaimbait.

    I seriously think that Slashdot should allow their subscribers to "vote" on the new stories that most people don't see...or a subset..if to many people think it is bad it gets red flagged for Taco to stare at or something.

    1. Re:Disappointing is subjective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess you don't go outside much:

      http://www.eweek.com/category2/0,1738,1391959,00 .a sp

      Notice a common theme?

    2. Re:Disappointing is subjective by faust2097 · · Score: 1

      Thurrot is one of the biggest Microsoft fanboys/shills on the face of the earth and for anything that's not completely rah rah about them to appear on his site is newsworthy, if only for the fact that it further points out how much of a hack he is.

  57. Microsoft = good? by thepotoo · · Score: 1
    > Don't tell me you guys actually expected Microsoft to come up with something good

    Well, yes, I kind of did.

    So far, I'm not impressed, (the GUI looks like a complete rip off of GNOME) but what really counts is the internal workings. Like, having less bloat, fewer security holes.

    I'll wait and try beta 1 for myself before making any judgements about spyware and vunerabilities.

    --
    Obligatory Soundbite Catchphrase
  58. Call me a nut....but I actually like the colors... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    Okay, I think there better be a helluva lot under the hood because I'm not paying $400 for a new GUI theme.

    But that said, I much prefer the Longhorn theme to anything I've seen to date. I thought it easy on my eyes. Sleek. Mechanical. Sexy.

    *shrug*

  59. Is Anyone Excited By This? by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who looks at screenshots and feels no clue as to usability or efficiency? These pics of Longhorn just look like pics of any OS.

    As a long-time Mac user, I've seen more than a few shots of upcoming OS X releases in rumour sites and felt much the same thing. Pictures of preference panes or windows don't excite me much.

    What are much more interesting are people's reactions to using an OS. This is where I get excited about OS X 10.4 but I'm not seeing so much excitement from Longhorn pre-beta users.

    It's early days yet, but when a company releases something publicly it has to be taken as indicative of the final product. Sure, things may change lots, but the fact that Microsoft are willing to put their name on it and have it seen by anybody and everybody says that this is something closer to final than anything seen before.

    1. Re:Is Anyone Excited By This? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is where I get excited about OS X 10.4 but I'm not seeing so much excitement from Longhorn pre-beta users.

      Thats because the two userbases aren't comparable at all. Mac users worships Apple in a way a normal computer user (who uses windows) would never do, or even understand.

      Windows users just needs to get work done and don't have time to worship the computer gods.

    2. Re:Is Anyone Excited By This? by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      Speaking plainly, that's just utter bullshit.

      You're saying that Apple users - ALL Apple users - don't use their machines for work, or if they do, that they buy the machine first and worry about work second.

      On top of that, you're also saying that PC users - ALL PC users - are hardworking people who use their computer purely as a tool for work.

      In specific cases, you're undoubtedly correct. In the general case, it's just utter bullshit.

      I've seen more than a few PC fanboys (or is it 'fanbois'?) crapping on and on endlessly about Microsoft, Windows, their choice of processor and so on. I've seen similar things from the Mac side as well.

      Lastly, I know a large number of Mac users (both personally and online) who use their Mac as a tool to get work done. They don't have to screw around with anti-virus software, don't have continual patching fun and don't have malware infections. They don't even have to think about such things. They just get on with what they want to do.

      In contrast, I've known a large number of PC users who talk about spyware, viruses and malware from the point of view of having been infected. They need to worry about these things, need to keep their AV software up to date, need to keep patching their Windows. Sure - it's just good precautions, but the thing is you *have* to do these things on Windows, you *have* to devote your time to system administration just to keep the OS running nicely. The Windows world doesn't allow users to just get on with their work - they have to keep malware in mind.

  60. No offense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "I'm looking forward to IE7"

    No offense, but why...because you don't like to use a non-MS browse, but want the features of firefox?

    Honestly, I don't know a technical user that uses IE these days. And further, I look forward to Longhorn with dread because it has DRM wrapped into the core. Longhorn will be the decision point to whether my next PC will be an x86 or a Mac.

    1. Re:No offense by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Longhorn will be the decision point to whether my next PC will be an x86 or a Mac.

      You're not alone, and I think it's reasonable to wonder if the future of the PC platform rests on how well Longhorn turns out. I can buy a Mac that performs, is dead-sexy (and small) enough to sit on top of the desk, and runs a really sweet OS.

      Plus, a lot more people are talking about Macs than they are about the big grey box hidden under the table.

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
    2. Re:No offense by trudyscousin · · Score: 1

      In my experience, you're the first person I've ever seen making an argument using the words "I can buy a..." followed by "Macintosh."

      Years of lurking among the trolls on comp.sys.mac.advocacy have inured me to that phrase, but this is a pleasant surprise.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, write technology blogs.
  61. Great improvements in Longhorn by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    I hear notepad can now render line feeds correctly!

    1. Re:Great improvements in Longhorn by abborren · · Score: 1

      That's great news! It always annoys me that notepad requires crlf but explorer nor wordpad does. It goes like this:

      * Open text file in notepad, discover it puts everything in one big fat line

      * Drag it into explorer to be able to read it correctly.

      There should at least be an option in notepad to set which method for linefeed to be used, or how difficuld could it be to just fix it?

      And the same thing applies to the windows default edit/text-boxes, you need a \r\n to make a new line.

      --
      ><////>
    2. Re:Great improvements in Longhorn by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      No, you misunderstood... it was a joke. We would be lucky if they actually did any useful improvements.

  62. Desktop by Fadeproof69 · · Score: 1

    Does anyone have a link for that window pane desktop used in the screenshots?

    1. Re:Desktop by shakezula · · Score: 1

      I grabbed it from Neowin before it went offline. Here's a link to it on rapidshare.de:

      http://rapidshare.de/files/1451006/LH5048-glass-wa llpaper.jpg.html

      --
      I know what you're thinking. Did I forward 65,535 packets or 65,536 packets?
  63. Mmm by mlk · · Score: 1

    I quite like the background.

    --
    Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  64. Requirements combined with a new mantra by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    Longhorn will run fine on a 1 GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM, according to Microsoft + new Microsoft mantra = "It just works slower!"

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  65. Billions of dollars later... ? by Adult+film+producer · · Score: 1

    I'd feel cheated if I were a shareholder in Microsoft. Look at what a small group of volunteers has done with Enlightenment in basically the same time frame.. Okay, it's not a perfectly fair comparison, Microsoft has to deal with hardware/driver/etc issues and a crazy amount of users and platforms. But for the amount of resources they have on hand to build a new operating system, they could have come up with something better than this. I'll be waiting for Enlightenment DR17 in the meantime.

  66. Key difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is free. And more importantly, it won't try to lock down content with its lovely DRM restrictions.

    Plus the thing is going to cost $200+. For $200, an operating system better buy me dinner and lick my b*lls.

  67. disappointment of the century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of what I've seen of Longhorn I am very disappointed. How does Microsoft expect to charge for something like that? On top of that it seems very sluggish even on fairly powerful machines e.g. P4 3.0 GHz. I am more impressed by my new Linux system and so will be many others. Linux rocks!

  68. No nitpicking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Seriouly, this is a standard M$ ploy. Any bugs you catch for them are free QA.

    Just ignore them and pretend they don't exist. They might go away faster.

    It's like picking at your zits. They keep coming back even more next time. Just keep it clean and things will clear up soon.

  69. Link fixed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.apple.com/macoxs/

  70. Have done our homework by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "and will give Mac OS X users a run for thier money."

    Closer to "will give Mac OS X users the runs.

    No seriously, why do you think "effects" are what will be make or break? They've still got the core wrong. Architecturally, Windows XP started MS down a path that they should abandon, but they won't. So they add "effects" call it longhorn, and it won't be a trainwreck, its going to be more like the Graf Zeppelin.

    You don't get why OS X.4 is good, so you think its because it looks sexy. No sonny boy. Its sexy because its good under the covers. Apple go it right.

  71. Re:Comparison by ARRRLovin · · Score: 1

    Exactly how is Longhorn more secure than Linux?

    Even LESS people will use it!

    --
    -Randy
  72. Consistency by Professor+S.+Brown · · Score: 0

    My main issue with Windows is consistency. I am glad to see they are making progress here, with only three differently themed folder icons.

    --
    Shitram Brown, PhD
    Professor of Mathematics
  73. Glass Houses by Dan667 · · Score: 1

    Looks like the new longhorn theme is to build a glass house. Guess they intend a "do no evil" policy for the future.

  74. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of Copying! by Gentlewhisper · · Score: 1

    Is it just me?

    The first thing that struck me was "Damned.. those Windows look just like those in MacOS, with the shiny look and all.."

  75. I will call you a nut by jpardey · · Score: 1

    If you want sleek, mechanical, and sexy, get yourself a bash prompt.

    On a more serious note, I like a gui that takes up little space, does everything needed, and is not distracting. Win 95 through 2000 seemed pretty good at that... but winamp is the best imho. This new thing has winxp sized bars and 1/2 95 buttons. Oh well... I will be running linux 3.2.48 on my 10 Ghz box by the time longhorn comes out.

    --
    I have freaks! I did something right...
  76. disappointing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After seeing the Longhorn screenshots and reading about how slow it is I am glad I sold my MSFT stocks in time. Microsoft has played their best card and clearly lost. Perhaps I should also switch to Linux now.

  77. On the positive side... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    ...they'll have exact details of how the wreck went down.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  78. RC0 Build? by zachtib · · Score: 1

    Notice the inclusion of a RC0 build, which is unusual. The last time Microsoft shipped an RC0 build of a Windows product, I believe, was with Windows Millennium Edition (Me). RC0 releases are typically designed to give Microsoft's hardware and software partners enough time to develop drivers and compatible software in time for the final release of a product.
    Does that mean Longhorn will be more like ME then?

    1. Re:RC0 Build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've got the basic idea just by reading into it a bit.

  79. Smallhorn by ehiris · · Score: 1

    It's OK if it's small. There are pumps that can make the horn longer. I can forward some e-mails to anyone interested.

  80. What is the point in HYPE-GUI by michalf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I do not really see a point in pseudo-improving the visuals in Longhorn. Being almost addicted to Linux where the system core and graphicsal environments are totaly separated - new widgets or whistles in Windows do not impress me at all. In Linux I can freely choose between Gnome, KDE and several others and a lot of custom themes for each. So an extra toolbar in Longhorn or an extra bar with "Administrator" written on it - what kind of joke is this?

    IMHO it is a VERY unreasonable to bind visuals to the system core. If gui goes down - the whole system does. Integration gives you (naively thinking) positive values, but what you can see in Linux or MacOsX is the counterexample.

    Ok - so Microsoft is promoting the new os with a few whistles added, perhaps drm integrated and will require you to buy a 3GHz processor to preserve the same quality and conveniance you had on a 166MHz running Windows 98.

    IMHO _IF_ MacOsX would be available for x86 along with all the drivers and software Windows has now - Windows would go down.

    I am also affraid the guys from Microsoft are permanently making some ideological/design mistake when developing next Windows edition. Look at Apple: they decided to go Unix and... MacOsX is one of the most stable and secure systems available. Microsoft keeps upgrading DOS 6.22 and patching security holes. The result is just... funny and sad. Funny when you just look at their attempt to fool people and force them to buy their shitty products and sad because... they succeed. And people WILL but Longhorn.

    michal

  81. Longhorn Beta is Disappointing by ack_call · · Score: 1

    "Longhorn Beta is Disappointing" Now there's a surprise and it ain't even out yet. Roll on the 29th!

  82. No SIdebar! by DoorFrame · · Score: 1

    Good, that giant analog clock took a shockingly large amount of real estate. Boo sidebar.

  83. Gee... by ArAgost · · Score: 1

    The owner of a "SuperSite for Windows" says that OS X rules and the Longhorn sux. This must mean something... Signed: A long time PC user who's looking at the Apple Store for his next computer.

  84. Misguided GUI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems like Microsoft thinks that if they make the elements large and friendly-looking enough, Windows will magically be easier to use.

    Reminds me of how some people think they can make foreigners understand English, if they just speak it loudly and slowly enough.

    I especially love how the Start Menu doesn't even have enough room for "Shut Down" to appear next to its shiny, friendly icon without being truncated to "Shut Do..."

    Yep, it's a good time to be a Mac user-- and an even better time to become one.

  85. How should longhorn be better? by Dr.Opveter · · Score: 1

    Seriously, you can endlessly talk about security but i think whatever OS has most (clueless) users will be targeted most because there's always security issues, but i really can't think of a single thing i'd like XP to do better in Longhorn (except making it more secure).

    Not a single thing. Why should Longhorn be anything else but disappointing?

    --
    Sample this!
    1. Re:How should longhorn be better? by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but i think whatever OS has most (clueless) users will be targeted most

      You'd think that, wouldn't you? But no, the OSX users are targeted not often at all, maybe never. Why? Decent OS architecture going on there. Decent may not even be generous enough.

      (Note to OSX users: This is *not* intended as a flame. I'm only pointing out that you don't have to become a computer engineer, when the OS designer doesn't sell you garbage.)

      Most gated community residents are clueless when it comes to hand-to-hand combat, but murders still happen more frequently in a Sao Paulo shantytown. Why? Why indeed. Go live in the Microsoft ghetto if you want, but don't say we didn't invite you to your own mansion.

  86. you n00b,,,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    by the way, did you know that LONGHORN is NOT a BETA yet....

    "but screenshots show minor visual updates from the last beta, and to quote Thurrot: 'This has the makings of a train wreck.'""

    pfft.... They arent working on the gui yet, as rather they are focusing on the backend part. look at Whistler *win xp* alphas, notice how they havent done jack shit to the gui... they work more on the gui when it is a beta...

    1. Re:you n00b,,,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like Mr. Gates said, "If you can't make it good, at least make it look good."

      I guess they haven't given up on making it good... yet.

  87. Re:Call me a nut....but I actually like the colors by chemistry · · Score: 1

    Fine. You are a nut. However if it makes you feel any better...I liked the default XP theme better than all the other...yeah yeah I know. I am a nut to.

  88. is it just me by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 1

    or does the longhorn logo look like it was modeled after the cDc logo

  89. "minor visual updates"? by DJ-Dodger · · Score: 1

    Of course you only see "minor visual updates". How many changes did you really expect to see in:
    1. A screenshot of the Boot Screen.
    2. A screenshot of Desktop
    3. A screenshot of the Start Menu
    4. Another screenshot of the Start Menu
    5. A screenshot of the My Documents Folder
    6. A screenshot of the Control Panel

    Was anyone really expecting a revolutionary new Boot Screen, Desktop, Start Menu, My Documents Folder or Control Panel??

  90. Anybody know... by aduzik · · Score: 1

    Does Longhorn still use the Themes service like XP? Meaning: could I get a Windows 2000 style desktop again? I really don't care for the themes -- they take up too much desk space and the Themes service occupies memory that I'd rather have for apps. (Also, my PC is pretty old)

    --
    If it's not one thing it's your mother.
  91. Re:Comparison by c0d3h4x0r · · Score: 1

    Even LESS people will use it!

    You mean fewer, not less, because people are individually countable discrete units. Only use less when you're talking about something that is not composed of discrete countable units, as in less water.

    --
    Moderator hint: a comment is neither "Flamebait" nor "Troll" if it is true.
  92. is this a joke or... a $5 makeover? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    looks like Longhorn is a joke. nothing but a crawling bit of eye candy or should i say a $5 makeover? Microsoft has lost the race.

  93. No, 'Shut Do!' is correct. by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

    No, it really is "Shut Do".

    When you hit the button, Mr. Do runs across the screen, kills a few penguins with his bouncy ball, and shuts down the machine.

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  94. Taking a pre-beta for what it's worth by amichalo · · Score: 1

    Okay, so this is "pre-beta" (isn't that called "Alpha"?) but what I see from the limited information is that MS is really afraid to take some giant leaps.

    Looking at other OS updates that made major improvements (Mac OS -> OS X, OS/2 -> OS/2 Warp, Linux pre-boot floppy -> Red Hat Fedora), they all abandoned antiquated concepts in favor of innovation.

    Take for example the "Control Panel". Same old Windows crap. Tons of grouped 'wizards' for managing your system. Why not take a page out of Apple's Spotlight book and allow the user to type in what they are wanting to do "add a user", "change desktop wallpaper" and give them the control.

    Other examples? Okay, the Start menu is old and busted. It was in Win95 and it still is. Can't MS, in their innovative, new OS, get with the usability? I'm not saying Apple's Dock or Linux's menu bar and virtual desktops are better, I'm just saying that they are CLOSER to providing an intuitive interface. Why the hell would anyone go to "Start" to logout?

    Just consider for a moment that the My Documents screenshot takes your eye on a journey just to figure out what is going on. For navigation we have what looks like a left nav tree structure, but we also have a drop down at the top (above the menu for goodness sakes!) and there is ofcourse the window name, "My Documents". I am assuming there is a third way to navigate, via the left arrow to the side of the drop down - whew, what is a computer novice to do? Then there is all the text - six menu bar options, presumably with drop downs, and four columns of file information (though it is not displaying the files in the columns, it is displaying them in an icons view, leading me to believe this is a mockup and not a real screen). Lastly, there is this summary with a folder icon (won't it ALWAYS be a folder icon? and, what's this, a link to "Show all properties..." Who is designing this screen anyway?

    Of course, the file browser isn't what Longhorn is all about, but it does show that MS isn't reaching too far from where their feet are firmly planted and it also shows that integrating system wide searching ontop of this design is going to ADD confusion and complexity, not eliminate it.

    --
    I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
    1. Re:Taking a pre-beta for what it's worth by dreamer-of-rules · · Score: 1

      As a Mac OS user, I nonetheless feel compelled to point out the search button clearly visible in the Longhorn control panel screenshot. For all I know, it may be a Google search bar instead of the obvious, but it's probably just the duck you were looking for.

      --
      Everyone is entitled to his own opinions, but not his own facts.
    2. Re:Taking a pre-beta for what it's worth by PDAllen · · Score: 1

      >Why the hell would anyone go to "Start" to logout?

      In Win95, this was confusing and no doubt caused problems. In Win98 a few people had trouble. By now, everyone knows that to logout you have to go to start. Yes it is stupid, yes it is unintuitive. But everyone now knows that you do that. If MS removed logout/shutdown from the start menu and put it somewhere else many people would click Start, look, curse, then go find where log out was moved to. It's not really something that would be worth changing. Very much like the QWERTY layout is not all that efficient, but everyone knows it so forcing everyone to change would not be clever. You might possibly like Dvorak and be willing to buy a Dvorak keyboard (or pull the keys and rearrange a standard one), but if Dell decided it would sell all its computers with Dvorak as standard it would lose money.

    3. Re:Taking a pre-beta for what it's worth by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
      Take for example the "Control Panel". Same old Windows crap. Tons of grouped 'wizards' for managing your system. Why not take a page out of Apple's Spotlight book and allow the user to type in what they are wanting to do "add a user", "change desktop wallpaper" and give them the control.

      Yeah, when Apple was shipping that turd pile called "System 9" no one was criticizing the "wizards" or the "control panel". Now all of the sudden it's "crap". Funny that.

      Why the hell would anyone go to "Start" to logout?

      Well, as it is well known here in bashland, Microsoft doesn't actually research or think about the features that go into their OS'es, but you can read this if you want a bit of enlightement. Hope that helps.

      MS isn't reaching too far from where their feet are firmly planted

      The rest of your dumb rant aside, Microsoft has to cater to several hundred million people with whatever ships in Longhorn. Let me know when you get to that point and we'll talk about how much you suck because you're not making enough changes to your core product that some random guy in Slashdot seems to think are necessary.

    4. Re:Taking a pre-beta for what it's worth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The rest of your dumb rant aside, Microsoft has to cater to several hundred million people with whatever ships in Longhorn. Let me know when you get to that point and we'll talk about how much you suck because you're not making enough changes to your core product that some random guy in Slashdot seems to think are necessary.
      Do you get that number from the XP base or only if you also throw in the people still running Win98? ... I honestly think the majority of frustration that some are expressing with Longhorn is that it doesn't really seem like it has made any progress worth talking about since the last WinHEC. If MSFT was some little startup outfit that would be a whole different situation, but to have the kind of resources and manpower that they have at their disposal and to arrive in the here and now with something that even Ultimate Fanboy Thurrott is poking fun at, is not the best situation to be in.
    5. Re:Taking a pre-beta for what it's worth by amichalo · · Score: 1

      ...when Apple was shipping that turd pile called "System 9" no one was criticizing the "wizards" or the "control panel". Now all of the sudden it's "crap". Funny that.

      Two things: (1) since when is something Apple does "untouchable" and cannot be criticized? (2) I didn't say Apple's System 9 control panels rocked, I said the way that Apple's Spotlight lets you type what you want to do and then finds the wizard is what rocks.

      As for your enlightening article about the Start menu, it doesn't carry weight with me. So some Microsoft employee (note the use of "we" in the article) wrote a blog to justify it. So what? No doubt there is justification for it. So what? That doesn't make it right, intuitive, or a feature that becomes untouchable in future OS revisions, it just makes it a feature so bad that someone had to write a justisification for it.

      The rest of your dumb rant aside, ...
      Why do we have to ignor the rest of my dumb rant? Because you cannot refute it or because it is "dumb"?

      Microsoft has to cater to several hundred million people with whatever ships in Longhorn. Let me know when you get to that point and we'll talk about how much you suck because you're not making enough changes to your core product that some random guy in Slashdot seems to think are necessary.

      Right. Don't mind me. I'm just the user base, the target audience, the person who Microsoft wants to sell this product to or better yet give this product to so that I will recommend it be deployed in my company.

      The line of "let me know when you do [insert achievement] and then you can bash it" is absolutely hard headed. I suppose a male obstitrician should never give a woman advice on her pregnancy, or perhaps NASA ground control shouldn't tell the astronaughts what to do in space.

      I stand by my statement that Microsoft's feet are firmly planted and they are only growing as far as they can reach without taking a step. Too bad for us as users, but too bad for MS share holders too.

      --
      I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
  95. Re:Jack of All Trades, Master of Copying! by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    Is it just me? The first thing that struck me was "Damned.. those Windows look just like those in MacOS, with the shiny look and all.."

    I just thought they were stuck for some wallpaper and ran outside with a digital camera, quick and snapped the outside of their building. Wallpaper is a poor reason to buy an operating system, but I think the default for XP looked a heck of a lot better.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  96. Opposite of silicon Heaven? by CrimsonScythe · · Score: 1

    WinHEC: The beta version of WinHELL?

    --
    The view was horrible and the smell was even worse; Julie severely regretted becoming a proctologist.
  97. JUNKER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no thank you. Buy OS X Tiger on April 29th 2005 (NOW), not 2075 for Long"tooth"

    blade

  98. Re:Comparison by chemistry · · Score: 1

    ok...so you knew there was going to be one smart ass that would point at that water is indeed discreet countable units...H2O. What you were probably not counting on was the fact that it would be someone with the name 'chemistry'

  99. START button doesn't work... by microcars · · Score: 1
    I could not get the START button to work.

    click click click, ....nothing.

    --
    I like microcars
  100. Change much? by fulldecent · · Score: 1, Informative
    So, I looked at the screen shot: http://www.winsupersite.com/images/reviews/lh5048_ 02_02.jpg

    --

    -- I was raised on the command line, bitch

    1. Re:Change much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's still using icons from Windows 95 which is what, like 4 or 5 years old now?
      So it's bad to use old icons?
      The folder icons are encrypted with ROT 90
      So it's bad to use new icons?
      In Internet Explorer icon, like with every bugfix, has changed
      So it's just different to use new icons?

      Ok, so from this I can conclude that you consider the use of new icons to be good, bad, and indifferent. Thank you for your input.

    2. Re:Change much? by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      That's odd since Windows XP has replaced those icons since pre-release. Maybe they didn't have the right icon in this build or something. Possibly a bug since I think they still include the icons in XP and evidently LH.

    3. Re:Change much? by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1

      Apparently, even though XP came out in 2001, they're still using 32x32 16-color icons for the Control Panel, Printer, and a few others. This raises a couple of interesting questions:

      1) Is there a person in charge of making icons for them?
      2) Is that person in a coma of some sort?
      3) If not, are they paid to not draw new icons?
      4) Finally, how do I sign up to not draw icons for Microsoft? It sounds like a very lucrative career path, and I'm well qualified. I've been not drawing icons for them for years!

  101. Re:Comparison by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It might be better than some linux UIs, however, we get to have more than 1 UI. At once. And even some of the crappy ones are more consistent, simpler in the "simpler is better" sense, and customizable.

    I say this from Firefox running in Windowmaker with several partially obscured xterms peeking out behind it.

    What I'm wondering, is whether M$ will have sense enough to steal OSX's network "location" feature, so that I don't have to tell customers that there is no easy way to set up their XP machine to have a static on our DSL, and DHCP when they take the laptop to work. Might not hurt to lose the "we won't let you start IE from a fresh install" thing they have going on too...

  102. Not Even Beta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Near the end of the (short) blog:

    Longhorn Beta 1 is currently scheduled for June 30, 2005.

    Is this the answer to dupes on Slashdot? Instead of submitting stories that happen two months ago, submit stories that happen two months from now?

    - sm

  103. Moved development to Debian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Who cares? We certainly do not. Our company recently moved all developers and some users to Debian (sarge) workstations and the plan is to migrate all desktops to Linux within 2 years.

    So far it's been great, in many ways Linux Desktop is much more flexible and more convinient than Windows.

    So... LongHorn, Shorthorn or no horns at all - we have more money to spend internally instead of sending it to MS.

  104. It Just Works!(tm) by SamMichaels · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Looks exactly like XP using an OS X theme...but remember kids, It Just Works!(tm)

    Although I'm glad they've decided to use technology created in the late 60s (which SCO owns and Al Gore invented) as well as a lovely new password scheme guaranteed to create jobs in the IT support workforce from all the clueless office lemmings. Not to mention how IE7 won't be exclusive to Longhorn nor will WinFS be included.

    So like I said...we're paying $299 for XP with an OS X theme.

    1. Re:It Just Works!(tm) by gg3po · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that they're also stripping down the much-hyped Next Generation Secure Computing Base (NGSCB). Longhorn is looking more underwhelming with each press release.

      --
      ---
    2. Re:It Just Works!(tm) by cortana · · Score: 1

      Why else would you think they bought the license to use SCO technologies? :)

    3. Re:It Just Works!(tm) by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      A few hundred more and you can buy an actual Mac!

      Well... the Mini anyway...

    4. Re:It Just Works!(tm) by TheDefenistrator · · Score: 0
      So like I said...we're paying $299 for XP with an OS X theme.

      Who the hell is "we"?

  105. How to hurt windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can you really hurt windows?

    Release OSX a week before Longhorn is released on the x86 platform. Surprise the industry. Whatever marketing Longhorn had will be overshadowed tremendously.

    Why shouldn't Apple go after the OS market? If they don't, MS will continue to try and shit on them in the mp3 player market - they will do all they can so that the ipod dies. Success now doesn't ensure success in the future. Fight back you emos!

    >

  106. Meanwhile, in some crazy alternate universe by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

    Slashdot Headline: Longhorn Beta Is Really Amazing

    bonch writes "Well, Longhorn beta 5048 was released a day before the start of WinHEC 2005, and, wow, everyone was totally impressed here. Paul Thurrott (a Windows writer whose previously reported review of Mac OS X Tiger was updated after user feedback) confirmed this today in day two of his blog from WinHEC. Microsoft needed something big to kill the hype of competitors, and they've pulled through in spades. To quote Thurrot: 'Who needs MacOS? Windows is incredible!' RMS could not be reached for comment, but mumbled something about his 'world crumbling around him'."

    . . . Yeah, wake me when we'd see *that* on Slashdot. :P

    --
    Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
  107. MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that that would have to qualify as the Slashdot Grand Unified Field Theory. Every possible incarnation of /. poster behavior pretty much stems from that single attitiude.

  108. Bwahahaha by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    ....and this is their revolutionary new product? Its clearly just a further dumbed-down higher bloat-factor version of Windows XP. Nothing new or revolutionary to see here. Same old "pile on the extra redundant layers" Microsoft mentality.

    Oh joy that even the "My Documents" folder is becoming uber-complex in the name of trying to over-classify everything. I wonder how many more gigahertz, gigabytes, and licencing fees this new monstrosity will suck out of an already overpriced Windows PC budget?

    The funniest thing is that most people still just use windows as a GUI for launching other apps. Which means it doesn't actually provide any more useful functionality than Windows 3.11 that came on 3 floppies.

    1. Re:Bwahahaha by xsspd2004 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Seven floppies, six where meaningful. DOS came on 3. Yes, I've been at this too long.

      --
      This is not an illusion, a rip-off, or a ninja technique!
    2. Re:Bwahahaha by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 1

      Luxury. I only had a 5.25-inch DD floppy drive (that's 360KB per disk for the young uns). I think Win3.1 was something like twenty floppies.

  109. Only on Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only on Slashdot do you get a MacOS plug even in articles about Windows... I wonder if Apple pays them or if the editors just love the taste of Steve Jobs's cock...

    1. Re:Only on Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope.

      They don't like the virus and spyware infested shithole that is MS windows.

      That was simple. Any more questions?

    2. Re:Only on Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought this was a professional technical news site, not some immature baffoon's rag.

  110. Re:The build for WinHec is a build for driver make by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They have been working on this thing for four or five years now. It's not like they started yesterday and have another five years to go.

    Just exactly how much work do you think they are planning to do in the next two months to take it to beta and final production anyway?

    --
    evil is as evil does
  111. Desktop vs. OS by mugnyte · · Score: 1


    If MS is going to try and wow a market with some new desktop icons and some alpha tricks, they better tout the bigger benefits louder. I'm in no mood to consider a new desktop interface a new OS; I don't want a longhorn demo to be someone pointing out shadows on dialogs. sheesh. I'm kinda miffed they don't make the whole desktop interface more replaceable anyway.

  112. Re:Comparison by c0d3h4x0r · · Score: 1

    Ahh, but you're still wrong, because water is not a plural noun. Regardless of its composition, it's still incorrect to say fewer water.

    On the other hand, molecules is a plural noun representing individually countable things. So it would be correct to say fewer H2O molecules, and incorrect to say less H2O molecules.

    --
    Moderator hint: a comment is neither "Flamebait" nor "Troll" if it is true.
  113. Hmm... nice desktop images by fakedupe · · Score: 1

    I've seen nicer ones. Where's Longhorn?

    The one shot of anything remotely Longhorn looks difficult to quickly scan (see left bar, or even the center area) http://www.winsupersite.com/images/reviews/lh5048_ 02_07.jpg

    I understand that this is a beta and all, but why even bother releasing those shots.

  114. Avalon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like DUH this Beta version doesn't contain Avalon, which is still in development... .

    Really ./ is getting really really lame? Any alternatives minus the bias and zealotry ?

  115. LH is not even in Beta yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You idiots!! Longhorn has not even reached Beta 1 stage yet! So Of course it's going to look rough.

    Beta 1 will be available this summer but even that won't have the UI eye candy. That will appear in a build in the fall.

    So wait till the fall to make your uninformed comments.

    1. Re:LH is not even in Beta yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i.e., it's almost the middle of 2005 and the successor to XP is not yet in Beta.

      OK, got it.

  116. When will we see another major update to the GUI? by skitz0 · · Score: 0

    Going from Windows 3.1 to Windows 95 was a major stepping stone. When are we going to see another jump like that, where you are left looking back at the old GUI asking "How did I ever work with that?"

    For the last 10 years (and by the looks of Longhorn previews the previews we have at least 5 more) we've had the exact same GUI with some eye candy thrown in. I know there is something to be said for usability and familiarity but there has to be something better.

  117. It's a DEVELOPER release by David+Horn · · Score: 1

    It's a developer release. I remember it being stated earlier that it's primary purpose is for developers to test apps and drivers on. Hence it doesn't need all the visual features etc completed and running.

    It's not a "demo" of Longhorn so people with a craze to see pretty icons on their PC can install it and show it off to friends.

    --
    PocketGamer.org - For the gamer on the go!
  118. Re:The build for WinHec is a build for driver make by scotlewis · · Score: 4, Insightful
    He's not commenting on the objective quality of the OS; he's commenting on the quality of it relative to the last Longhorn release:
    This is a painful build to have to deal with after a year of waiting, a step back in some ways. I hope Microsoft has surprises up their sleeves.

    In other words, the OS is trending from promising towards disappointing. The whole point of the big screen dog and pony show is to build excitement about the coming OS (yes, even at the developer shows). By bringing out a version that seems worse than the last one MS is killing enthusiasm for Longhorn.
  119. The buttons make perfect sense by Rui+del-Negro · · Score: 2, Informative

    The buttons are fine. The colour alone tells you what they do, and the icons are identical to the ones found on numerous home appliances (ex., DVD players, TVs, etc.).

    Red (w/ power button icon): shutdown
    Yellow (w/ remote power button icon) : stand by
    Green (w/ spark icon): restart

    If you can't associate green with "go", red with "stop" and yellow with "stand by", I hope you don't drive.

    RMN
    ~~~

    1. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Fred+Foobar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Go" doesn't in any way mean "restart" to me. How on earth did you get that association (besides looking at the text below the button)?

      --
      It was a really good paper.
    2. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then why aren't they in that order?

    3. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by drew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      yeah, except red (stop) could be meaningfully used to convey all three, and yellow (how do you come up with an automatic association between yellow with "stand by"; if anything, it would be "caution" or "prepare to stop") and green (go) don't really apply to any of the three.

      as far as the icons on numerous home appliances, i think the 'power' icons they use for shut down and stand by tend to be used fairly interchangeably, and i've never seen the 'tentacle' icon anywhere that i can remember.

      at any rate, my personal pet peeve regarding the shutdown dialog, as someone who tends to use keyboard shortcuts far more often than the mouse, is that it is not clear which one is currently selected and which one will be activated when i hit enter. i usually hit the left/right arrow keys a couple of times and watch for the annoyingly subtle change in color to know which icon is currently highlighted before i hit enter.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    4. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by IthnkImParanoid · · Score: 1

      People don't look at icons, they look at text. If you can find 5 non techy, end user types that can draw the power symbol (circle with line through top part) from memory I'll give you a rim job. I've pointed out that that symbol always means "power" and the reaction I get is always a suprised "well, I never!"

      Anecdotally, the monitors at work are Dell monitors. The power button is mid-sized and off to the right with the power symbol on it and a perfectly visible LED next to it. A line runs from the LED a quarter inch to the power putton. There is also a large circle with the Dell logo on it that looks like a big button. Guess which one people push when you give them the monitor?

      --
      It's nothing but crumpled porno and Ayn Rand.
    5. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by swilver · · Score: 1

      I just noticed my Philips monitor has the 2nd icon (circle with a line inside it) above the power button. It's a power button though, as it doesn't go stand-by or anything (there's no other way to activate the monitor except pressing the button again). The button is also a fairly heavy robust type.. no clicky dip switch or anything.

    6. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by sevinkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Next time I see a green light I'm gonna shut off the engine in my car and turn it back on again :)

    7. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A button with a verticle line in a circle has been used as a power button glyph for a number of years now. The evolution went like this: "On/Off" text to "1/0" text to just a "1" in a circle to that line in a circle.

    8. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If you can't associate green with "go", red with "stop" and yellow with "stand by", I hope you don't drive."

      I don't know where you drive, but around here yellow is associated with "drive very fast". Something I doubt Longhorn will do if I click on it.

    9. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Zarxos · · Score: 1

      I just push "u" for shut down so I don't have to worry about it.

    10. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by weapon · · Score: 0

      You obviously have not used windows enough, a restart does make windows go faster.

      Seriously, I would say they choose the other colours first, like red for stop, yellow for slow down, the background is blue, etc. etc. Black may have been a snsible colour, but it would not have looked right, so they settled on green.

      Weapon

    11. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I'm presented with a green light after a red light, I do "restart" driving. That's exactly what you see in XP. You press the red button market "turn off computer", then you get a chance to press a green button (restart after shutting down). Yes, it is made by Microsoft. Amazing how sometimes they get things right too, isn't it?

    12. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Archimonde · · Score: 1

      If you use keyboard shortcuts try this:

      Shutdown: Start-u-u
      Restart: Start-u-r
      Standby: Start-u-s
      Hibernate: Start-u-h

      This is very simple and effective.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    13. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by farghen · · Score: 1

      Well, after a few tries you maybe would have noticed that 'Stand By' is always selected by default

    14. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This metaphor brought to you by a company that decided to decorate your desktop with wallpaper. :-/

    15. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Bunyip+Redgum · · Score: 1

      Unless one is colour-blind!

    16. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I'm presented with a green light after a red light, I do "restart" driving.

      I heard the analogy snap from here.

    17. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by drew · · Score: 1

      eventually i did, but for a long time i was regularly switching back and forth between a windows xp machine (defaults to stand by when you shut down) and a win2k machine (defaults to whatever you did the previous time you shut down). since i used the win2k machine a lot more, i tended to always expect whichever machine i was using to default to whatever i did the previous time.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    18. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Storlek · · Score: 1

      ... unless it's not in English, in which case none of those letters will work.

      --
      Bears don't normally eat things that talk and move backwards.
    19. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why they use the standard ISO icons, too.

    20. Re:The buttons make perfect sense by drew · · Score: 1

      i prefer windows 2000's behavior of defaulting to whichever was the most recently used, so that about 95% of the time, i can just hit ALT+F4, Enter, and not have to worry about which keys mean what. i guess that's the other thing that irritates me about XP's shutdown dialog- the default option is the one that i use the least of the 4.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
  120. It's coming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A friend of mine, a talented UI artist, who works at MS says they they are purposely witholding the final UI design to prevent Apple and other from "responding." I think it is safe to say that the final UI will be in the same ballpark as Aqua, given that fact that MS can just copy it if they can't come up with something better. But, as the saying goes, you can't put lipstick on a pig and the reason the OS X is so great isn't just because of the way it looks.

  121. Who needs all these fancy UIs? by Bhalash · · Score: 1

    I use Fluxbox and Rox Filer on all my Linux systems and between them they provide everything I need from a window manager. If Longhorn will be anything like XP, by itself it will probably eat half my memory even before I run applications.

  122. Though not quite as ugly as OSX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft and Apple made better interfaces back when they copied IBM and Xerox. Ever since they started just copying each other, desktops have turned into shampoo bottles. If only the Linux people didn't have such an inferiority complex, maybe they could stop copying Microsoft's and Apple's crap and creating something better.

  123. Longest... learning curve... ever. by jpellino · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We can look forward to another decade of...

    "So how do I stop the computer?"
    "You press 'Start'."

    [Cue head pounding]

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  124. Windows 2000 Redux by wintermute1974 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Am I the only person here who intentionally stopped upgrading Microsoft operating systems at Windows 2000?

    Admittedly, I love three features that I have experienced on XP machines:
    1. Having the ability to monitor network traffic in the task monitor
    2. Running multiple users simultaneously
    3. ClearType
    Despite these nice features, well, there just seems to be some deep, overall suckiness with Windows XP. It doesn't seem right: It's like Microsoft forgot why it was in business.

    Has anyone else experienced this feeling? Is anyone else worried about the day when drivers for new hardware no longer work in Win2K?
    1. Re:Windows 2000 Redux by argent · · Score: 1

      Am I the only person here who intentionally stopped upgrading Microsoft operating systems at Windows 2000?

      Not me. XP is really only a minor bump to 2000, as near as I can tell, with some extra software like the multiuser stuff they got from Citrix bundled in with it.

      It kind of feels like they came out with XP because they wanted an excuse to put the timed suicide bomb in to enforce registration.

    2. Re:Windows 2000 Redux by SunFan · · Score: 1


      I stopped at Windows 98 SE. It just works :p

      --
      -- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
    3. Re:Windows 2000 Redux by poofyhairguy82 · · Score: 1
      Has anyone else experienced this feeling?

      Yes. W2K is Microsoft's best.

      Is anyone else worried about the day when drivers for new hardware no longer work in Win2K?

      No, because after years of not being happy with XP- despite efforts on my part- I decided that I no longer wanted to be dependent on a sliding giant. I spent months trying to learn Linux, even though every distro I tried was worse than 2K so that I wouldn't have to worry. Finally a version of Linux was released that I think is better than W2K (Ubuntu 5.04) and I happily don't give a damn if Longhorn is yet another regression. (NOTE: I haven't used Windows 2003 that much, I don't know how good it is...)

    4. Re:Windows 2000 Redux by urlgrey · · Score: 1

      Amen, brother.

      I myself was a very reluctant adopter of 2000 when it was released. Having heard there were 65,000 bugs they knew about at release time, I feared much worse than just "the worst." I was expecting a scene like that from Ghostbusters with Bill Murray, "Riots in the streets, dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria!"

      Funny thing is, after adopting XP Pro fairly early on and quickly learning how to take it out of the absurd default 'Clown Mode'(tm) with all those blasted animations. Grrr.], I found a lot of things just r a n S L O W E R on XP

      Double Grrr.

      So after a couple of reloads back and forth with 2K and XP since XPs release (on the same machine), I can say with complete sincerity, 2K is both noticably faster and their best OS. Don't talk to me about 'faster boot times'. Who cares? I reboot maybe a dozen times a year with 2K.

      -K.

      --
      Running 'Nix is like owning a Lightsaber. It's "a more elegant weapon for a more civilized time."
    5. Re:Windows 2000 Redux by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      I stopped after Win98SE.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    6. Re:Windows 2000 Redux by smash · · Score: 1
      My thoughts exactly, however - the network monitor i can live without (just use third party), and multiple users at the same time isn't a huge benefit for me.

      My only desirable feature is cleartype for my LCD... and I'm starting to get over it due to the ridiculous number of patches...

      I'm not too worried about a lack of drivers for Win2k. I'll be running Linux or MacOS X exclusively by then - as more and more applications move to a web-based / cross platform (eg, java/.net) framework, OS choice will become increasingly irrelevant - and the freedom to use what's comfortable (as opposed to which has application support) will become apparent :)

      As for games... I haven't played anything on PC that grabs me in about 2-3 years - PC games now cater to the "shiny things" crowd, gameplay sucks...

      smash.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    7. Re:Windows 2000 Redux by diamondsw · · Score: 1

      Add drivers to that list and I'm in complete agreement.

      --
      I don't know what kind of crack I was on, but I suspect it was decaf.
  125. Too much press for Microsoft! by Truth_Quark · · Score: 1
    Will you stop posting all these microsoft articles to the front page of slashdot please Zonk?

    Yes, I know longhorn will be out within a few years, and I know it supports 64 bit computing, (leaving it about 10 years behing linux at projected date of release).

    If they want their name everywhere, they can afford to buy ads.

    1. Re:Too much press for Microsoft! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this BAD "Microsoft" Press. Microsoft can't buy that! :-) Or maybe they can?

  126. Windows becoming difficult to use? by tchernobog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What I noted looking at the control panel screenshot, is that it looks a lot more complicate than what I remembered back from the days when I still used Windows (:grins:).

    I mean, people always say "GNU/Linux is difficult to master, you need to be a genius to use that"... "what a mess of options, how can I find a way through that"... and then... please compare: Windows (Ok, the "classic view" link is there, but that's just an example) - A GNU/Linux desktop

    This seems a common trend while time passes: systems become bigger and more difficult to use if you're not a literate (who, ten years ago, would have cared about what's a gateway being on Windows? who _doesn't_ now?). Good luck for GNU/Linux, then. It has been ten more years of experience in being complex. :-)

    Seriously, computer literacy is becoming a prerequisite for every system out there, and this makes switches easier from Windows to anything else. Even if this isn't the matter, they're all becoming "more to read and less to click".

    (PS: Counting the seconds before someone says something about how MacOSX solves all these problems by being the most simple system in the world yaddayaddayadda. :-) )

    --
    42.
  127. It's because... by jd · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...the Recycle Bin is in an alternate universe, where light operates in the reverse direction and files magically cease to exist (unless you need to restore them).

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  128. Public release Holiday 2005 is not far off by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Two things to me say it's not all that far off from release. One is that beta 1 is very close - which you'd think would mean pretty mcuh all the features were in place right now, but kind of buggy.

    Also in the main article is the expection of RTM in Mid-2006, but more importantly the "public release" for holiday 2005 (whatever that means - I'm guess the "holiday" is not Halloween!).

    That would seem to me that around the end of the year they'd have the product pretty much done if they felt it ready for public consumption. So if people are complaining of features they do not see now, that seems pretty justified given the short amount of runway Microsoft really has left to them. It seems to me that for something the size of an OS, beta 1 at least would be "feature complete" if not perfect. And as I said beta is very close now.

    Personally I do feel it's way to early to call for a "train wreck" but this guy also knows more than most of us, so perhaps that's an intuitive statement based on a larger body of knowledge than we have access to.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Public release Holiday 2005 is not far off by bankman · · Score: 1
      ...which you'd think would mean pretty much all the features were in place right now, but kind of buggy.

      You are describing the condition at the point of release. Currently they still have to rip out a couple of new features, which are still in a "crashesthebloodymachineallthetime" state. Of course they still talk about these features since other OSs already have them or have had them for ages.

      BTW, don't you just love the headings for detailed view while you have chosen icon view as shown in this screenshot.

      --
      I feel so sig.
  129. Re:When will we see another major update to the GU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When are we going to see another jump like that, where you are left looking back at the old GUI asking "How did I ever work with that?"

    Speaking as someone who's supported Windows users for 12 years, I can tell you I've never heard anyone say that.

    I have, however, heard many a person say "How am I ever going to work with this?" upon seeing a new GUI with lots of stuff moved from where they were used to it.

  130. try "successor to OS 5" by Heisenbug · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm starting to think that they're at the same point Apple was at in the 90s: every attempt to build a modern successor to OS 9 from scratch crashed and burned horribly.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taligent

    It seems that Apple was working on "an object-oriented OS on top of a new microkernel" in C++ since *1988*, following System *5.0*. They finally gave up on it in 1996, when they bought NeXT, which had many of the same concepts and was released as part of OS X in 2001 ...

    It's a lot like reading the history of the space program, isn't it? First you've got airplanes that can go into space being ready any day now, and Mars by 1980, and now we're just happy if we can get satellites into orbit ...

    1. Re:try "successor to OS 5" by BandwidthHog · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, DUH!

      I guess I've gotten to the point where think of anything predating OS X as OS 9. I remember being aware of Taligent back in the System 7 days, and Copland back in the OS 8 era. I still have a Umax S-900 with the SCSI-2 bus permanently disabled by an attempt to install a copy of OS 8.7 that I found on HotLine.

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    2. Re:try "successor to OS 5" by blofeld42 · · Score: 1

      Everyone was all interested in Taligent until they got a look at it. It was awful. I was working on NeXTs at the time, and it was painful to see the demo at ObjectWorld in the mid-90's. It sucked on a monumental scale. They had 512 MB machines (in 1995!) and it crawled. Plus flashing X-Windows colormaps! And over 10,000 C++ classes in the development framework! God, that was one of the worst large development projects ever.

    3. Re:try "successor to OS 5" by Heisenbug · · Score: 1

      Heh, funny. That kind of came through in the wiki article, but not so explicitly. I'll stand by my space program metaphor. :)

  131. Ominous by petrus4 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Those who dislike Microsoft should rejoice if this beta *is* a train wreck.

    I am entirely confident, and have been for some time, that one way or another, Longhorn is going to represent Microsoft's last stand...this will be made even more certain if it is a failure. I've said it before and I'll say it again...Microsoft have never had a coherent roadmap after NT 4, and that fact is now clearly showing.

    Bankruptcy won't be here for a while yet, but market irrelevance is coming up fast...I'm predicting that by 2012 at the latest, Windows' market share will have almost completely evaporated.

    If you're a Microsoft shareholder, I have one word of advice for you at this point: Sell. This is one ship which, when the sinking process is closer to completion, you really won't want to still be on.

    1. Re:Ominous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I TOTALLY AGREE! IT HAS HAPPENED BEFORE! REMEMBER WHEN IBM RULED THE WORLD BEFORE THE PC. IBM does not even make a PC anymore. IBM had 400,00 employees and had to lay off 200,000 of them and a lot of them did not really do anything and had trouble getting another job. IBM is a shadow of its former self. They are just a consulting company.

      HISTORY ALWAYS REPEATS ITSELF!

    2. Re:Ominous by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      "Longhorn is going to represent Microsoft's last stand"

      Oh, come on. You could have said that about Mac OS 9 - an OS that definately *was* a train-wreck.

      Apple put out a shit OS for years, stumbled to get OS X out the door (10.0 was a disaster), but managed to recover.

      Microsoft has billions in the bank and a stable revenue stream from new systems.

      They aren't going away anytime soon. Longhorn may be a flop, but if it is, it's not the end for Microsoft. Not in the least.

    3. Re:Ominous by advocate_one · · Score: 1

      your advice to start selling Microsoft shares is fine to a point... the point being that lots of people's pension funds have major investments in Microsoft and those funds are usually very slow to get out of the pan when things start going wormy... so if you start a panic slide on Microsot, then basically, everybody gets to hurt... we need Microsoft shares to come down slowly... not implode in panic selling.

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    4. Re:Ominous by Eminence · · Score: 1
      • REMEMBER WHEN IBM RULED THE WORLD BEFORE THE PC. IBM does not even make a PC anymore. IBM had 400,00 employees and had to lay off 200,000 of them and a lot of them did not really do anything and had trouble getting another job. IBM is a shadow of its former self. They are just a consulting company.

      Blah, blah, blah... another stupid rant...

      When will you, dear Anonymous Cowards, learn something from the history you claim is so educating.

      Last time I checked IBM was far from being bankrupt, they were doing quite fine actually. And being a consulting company is a higher level of abstraction, you sell pure knowledge, no need to keep any bricks & mortar. That's great news for IBM shareholders.

    5. Re:Ominous by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      >Oh, come on. You could have said that about Mac OS
      >9 - an OS that definately *was* a train-wreck.

      Apple aren't a (near) universally hated, convicted predatory monopolist.

      Besides which, you're not thinking big picture. If Longhorn fails, it will be even more of a vindication of what I've been saying about them not having any long-term strategy after NT4. If there's one thing corporate types don't like, it's having to use their brains. They want to be able to go into a software vendor's office and be taken care of from start to finish...Including the operating system itself, installation, training, and support...the lot. They don't want to have to think about any of it...they want it to be completely autonomic.

      Because they don't want to have to think about it however, it means that in order to stay ahead of the game, the vendor corporation needs to think about it for them...and that includes having a concrete idea where the operating system is going, structure and feature wise, up to ten years in advance. Microsoft do not have that...and as a result, they will continue to keep scrambling to release half-baked patch jobs for an operating system which is sufficiently technically inferior that it never should have got out the door in the first place. Meanwhile, people will be buying shiny new Linux desktops and servers as Red Hat, Novell, IBM, and Mandrake quietly and steadily close the gap.

      You may not agree with me, but you don't have to. Just watch.

    6. Re:Ominous by Eminence · · Score: 1
      • Bankruptcy won't be here for a while yet, but market irrelevance is coming up fast...I'm predicting that by 2012 at the latest, Windows' market share will have almost completely evaporated.

      Did you notice how market share for MS-DOS has evaporated yet Microsoft is far from being bankrupt? If someone bought some MS shares in the MS-DOS era would they loose much by selling them now?

  132. Even gayer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now Microsoft will need to make Longhorn even gayer to appease the ass-exploders who are not suppored by Microsoft!

  133. Microsoft recommends betas, though! by jd · · Score: 1

    Didn't Microsoft recently say that you can use their betas in a mission-critical production environment? In which case, what does it matter if this is a beta release? If Microsoft deems that usable, then that is the standard it should be measured against.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  134. 10-year old icons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check out the disgusting Control Panel and Printers and Faxes icons http://www.winsupersite.com/images/reviews/lh5048_ 02_02.jpg

    They are disgusting because they don't fit the feel of the rest of the icons - they are glaringly outdated, and date back to Windows 95. If I was MS I wouldn't be showing ANYONE this!

    You'd think MS could hire some icon creators to rectify this! Just further proof this is just XP with some theming updates.

    1. Re:10-year old icons by reiggin · · Score: 1, Troll

      The icons you see in the beta screenshots are NOT the icons that will roll out with the actual final release. MS is keeping those and the theme a tight secret. Afterall, they have to have SOME element of surprise to use in all their glitsy marketing.

  135. the more things change, by Brunellus · · Score: 1

    ...the more things stay the same

    Come on, people. Exactly what can really be divined from a handful of fairly bland screenshots of a pre-beta build posted on a blog? The only thing they tell me is that MS is not changing much in terms of its UI for Longhorn. Big deal. From their point of view, radical changes to the UI are a bad thing...they have an established (if admittedly not pretty) look and feel, and an absolutely enormous userbase who are utterly dependent on that UI staying exactly as it is.

    And it isn't as if the "ugliness" of the UI is going to turn people away. At the end of the day, it's the OS that came preloaded with their computer. OSX may be pretty, but it's not what their school or office is running or has trained them on, and, besides, those shiny computers are too expensive compared to the more homely boxes that run Microsoft's OS. Yes, they can always defect to GNU/Linux, or *BSD, or even FreeDOS, but why go through all the trouble?

  136. Heavier hardware requirements than OS X? by argent · · Score: 1
    That's creepy. I haven't tried running XP in really tight quarters but I'm running 2000 in 64M on a P266 (not even MMX) and it doesn't hurt a bit. Oh, a lot of apps are too bulky for this weeny box, but it's just fine for web and mail stuff.

    Here's what he says about the requirements for Longhorn:
    Longhorn will run fine on a 1 GHz computer with 256 MB of RAM, according to Microsoft corporate vice president Joe Peterson at the blogger lunch today. This is good news for today's PC users, some of whom are concerned that they won't have the PC muscle needed to run the next Windows. Of course, those people won't get the full-blown Aero Glass experience, but it will still work fine.
    They're talking about a box that's somewhere between my Beige G4 (Beige G3 upgraded with a G4/466 CPU) and my Mac mini... and closer to my Mac mini. Both of these boxes run OS X with the full blown Quartz Extreme experience just fine.

    It looks like Microsoft has finally leapfrogged Apple in at least one area... excessive hardware requirements. The whole point to QE is that because it's handled in the GPU it doesn't matter if the CPU is a bit wimpy... the CPU isn't doing any of the heavy lifting. Did Paul misunderstand Joe or did Microsoft miss the point?
  137. Thurrot or Thurrott by herting · · Score: 0

    It seems his name changed within the course of only 5 lines.

    --
    http://www.mample.net
  138. Windows Really Stupid Edition by grolschie · · Score: 1

    Talk about dumbed down. Especially the Control Panel. This is worse than XP. At least there's still the Classic View option.

  139. Am I the only one by Kargan · · Score: 2, Funny

    Who immediately gets the Beck song "Novacane" stuck in their heads whenever they read anything about Longhorn?

    "Got so numb, longhorn drum
    Detonate with the suicide gate
    Test tube, stillborn days
    Telescope rays in the rabies haze
    Got the momentum, radioactive
    Meltdown!"

    Yeah, I guess I probably am.

    --
    Palaces, barricades, threats, meet promises
  140. Interesting desktop background... by argent · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That desktop background looks quite evocative.

  141. It's fugly by Cloud+K · · Score: 1

    I downloaded it and installed it out of curiosity, as you do.

    Apart from their first attempts to try and copy Apple with the pretty effects when you restore a window from minimize and the little search engine appearing everywhere, nothing much has changed. Funny how they've finally "accidentally leaked" a practical demonstration (if buggy) of these technologies just before Tiger is released.

    To their credit though, there is the revolutionary scrollbar on the start menu which I've been crying out for for 10 years, and about bloody time! It's magnificent. But apart from that, almost nothing seems to have changed.

    To be fair, this *is* a pre-beta... but I wouldn't even call it a pre-alpha at this stage. They still seem to be throwing ideas around after all these years.

    Anyway - the fastest way to get this is on usenet alt.binaries.mac.osx.apps - we're all slashdotters so hopefully everyone knows how to get there ;) Top speed, no queues, no uploading, and direct to your ISP's servers so *very* little chance of getting intercepted. Yum.

    1. Re:It's fugly by Cloud+K · · Score: 1

      Ehhhh heh heh heh .... that is NOT where to get it. Doesn't take a genius to guess what I'm thinking of :)

      I mean alt.binaries.warez.ibm-pc.ms-beta !!

  142. They need help with the window decorations... by argent · · Score: 1

    BOY do they need help.

    I wonder if Max Rudberg would be willing to help them fine-tune them.

  143. Holy Mother Of God. by simetra · · Score: 1

    Does anyone really need all those descriptions? Doesn't everyone know what's in a control panel and etc? Why does this GUI seem to be saying "Hey, I know you've been using this computer for several days now, but just incase you're a functional moron, here are nice wordy descriptions of what all this crap does. Don't worry, I'll popup a dialog box describing them further if you move your mouse over them." ???

    Also, who needs two columns of stuff on a start menu? It's annoying! I truly believe MS peaked with Win2000.

    --

    "Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
  144. Unfortunately, not with most people by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    OS-X has proven this well. There are a number of features it has that are bad from a usability standpoint, worse than the thigns they replaced, or not as good as others out there. However they have big wow factor. People like the eye candy. Most people who see OS-X for the first time comment on how cool it looks. Tog rails on the dock (http://www.asktog.com/columns/044top10docksucks.h tml) as being a tech demo, not a good tool. However that's what people like about it, the looks. We can learn to deal with idosyncracies, we do all the time, and people will if it means they get to have something shiny and cool like the dock.

    While all the geeks will agree that things like this SHOULDN'T matter since, after all, an OS is just a tool for getting things done, it does matter to many people.

  145. Heh by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

    The whole tone of Slashdot when it comes to Longhorn sounds like someone who is desperate to believe their own propoganda. Here we are, over a year from final release, and because of a few screenshots, people are already claiming that this looks like it could be a "train wreck". Puh-leeze.

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.
    1. Re:Heh by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Ok then, what makes you a believer?

      Or at least, what do you see that is at all compelling?

      I don't see *anything* but some minor UI changes that are the result of changing styles in culture.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:Heh by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but if you think OS Improvements = Graphical updates to the Interface, then you should probably stick with your Mac.

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    3. Re:Heh by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Are you illiterate?

      Re-read my post and the grandparent (also mine).

      Then take your head out of your ass.

      Moderator: Yes, this is a flame.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    4. Re:Heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The phrase "train wreck" should be properly attributed to Paul Thurrott, author of the SuperSite for Windows, not to anyone in particular on slashdot.

  146. Wow! Longhorn will do what Linux distros do now! by xtracto · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, for example, the icon for a Word document in Longhorn displays a miniature version of the first page of that document and a Microsoft PowerPoint slide show icon displays the first slide

    Sorry but, don't KDE have this feature now?? and frome quite some time? Again, I think MS is just copying features from other platforms and selling them as Great Inovation(tm)

    --
    Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
  147. Sure.. by bmajik · · Score: 1

    http://www.microsoft.com/events/executives/billgat es.mspx

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    1. Re:Sure.. by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      Bitchin. Thank you.

    2. Re:Sure.. by FuturePastNow · · Score: 1

      To download (instead of stream) in Windows...get SDP Multimedia recorder and save the file mms://wnbgmsft-wm9.fplive.net/wnbgmsft/winhec_2005 0425_300.wmv

      --
      Give a man fire, and you warm him for the night. Set a man on fire, and you warm him for the rest of his life.
  148. Gray Gradients Abound by itomato · · Score: 1

    "And what do those screenshots tell us anyways? I did not see anything new..."

    One thing I noticed *IMMEDIATELY* from the screenshots is that the windows are drawn in gray, with a centrally-highlighted region, that from a distance, looks entirely too similar to the gray windows with a centrally-highlighted region from that *OTHER* operating system.

    Jobs was right - they are copying fast. Even the icons are changing again. They are afraid to stand on their own two feet and just "do what they do". Longhorn won't be a better Windows, it will be a clone of OS X on PCs.

    It will be irrelevant once the market share picks up under the Mac Mini and Tiger.. Windows will be that "Old OS" that nobody uses because it doesn't play UNIX like Linux/OS X does. It will 'pretend' but, it just won't be there.

    1. Re:Gray Gradients Abound by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      It will be irrelevant once the market share picks up under the Mac Mini and Tiger.. Windows will be that "Old OS" that nobody uses because it doesn't play UNIX like Linux/OS X does. It will 'pretend' but, it just won't be there.

      Right. Because "like unix" is something every consumer looks for in an OS. Hell, I know that's the first thing my Grandma asked me last week when she wanted to get into this whole internet thing - "is it like unix ?"

  149. Microsoft is seriously unfocused by Matey-O · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I just got done with their Internet Security and Accelerator training. This, plus the stuff i've seen in Longhorn, plus the other things I've seen remind me of the movie 'The Hudsucker proxy':

    "Idea man treading water"

    Microsoft has not produced ANYTHING compelling in the last three years. It's more an excercise of 'lets sell them on more features', rather than 'lets sell them on something that improves the experience'.

    The constant treadmill arms race of spyware/patch/reboot (Which I've seen take well running machines and reduce them to perma-reboot) plus bloatware that sucks the life out of a P4 with HALF A GIG of RAM. (Have you noticed the difference in performance between a new installation pre and post Office 2k3?)

    So, lets pitch the API, lets pitch the file system (oops, can't do that in time), lets pitch your old hardware, and lets do it in the usual lock-step upgrade deathmarch again.

    I think they've run out of useful features to add...and I think it's gonna bite them in the ass.

    --
    "Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
  150. No one waiting in line at midnight? by HangingChad · · Score: 1
    I'm guessing the days of people waiting in line all night for the latest version of Windows are pretty much over.

    I'm not as concerned about how it looks as how it operates. Still, my sense is that people are getting fed up with MSFT's crap. And the quality of their software doesn't matter. They still treat their customers like a revenue stream and now there's an alternative. And people are picking the alternative for quality AND price.

    www.itworldcanada.com/Pages/Docbase/ViewArticle. aspx?id=idgml-8f87ddb3-bfe0-4b69&s=90323

    The IT world no longer revolves around the products MSFT puts out. Glory days, they pass you by.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  151. I don't think they were really demoing by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    What I gather is this release is specificly for driver writers, so they can get a nice long head start on getting drivers for their hardware ready, since the driver model is changing quite a bit from the 2k/XP one.

    Thus I can see why they'd not give two shits about the UI. They just want to get something workable to the hardware companies so they can start work.

    1. Re:I don't think they were really demoing by argent · · Score: 1

      Thus I can see why they'd not give two shits about the UI.

      That's why they show us a different one every time? They need to quit messing with ugly UIs until they've got a better one than Windows 2000 did.

      And they're still taking after Apple's appalling metallic look.

    2. Re:I don't think they were really demoing by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Then they shouldn't have made a huge deal out of demoing it in front of a giant audience.

      And yes, I think you hit the nail right on the head when you said they don't give a shit about UI.

    3. Re:I don't think they were really demoing by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      Because people like those shitty looks. I mean I hate XP's new look, I always revert to teh classic look. However I know tons of non-techies that think it's great. As I pointed out in another post, people want the eye candy. Even if it makes shit harder to use, they'll deal with that so long as it looks cool.

  152. Topic was enough by DarkMorph · · Score: 1

    I read the title of the entry: "Longhorn Beta is Disappointing" I didn't have to read beyond that. In fact, I could've told anyone that without even using it or looking at it. Ha.. (flamebait, oh shit)

    --
    Gentoo Linux - Wouldn't have it any other way. And fuck beta.
  153. longhorn = looserhorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, the first impression of Longhorn is indeed a big disappointment. They totally hyped it up and probably thought they could keep people waiting and prevent them from switching to Linux. Yeah, right.

  154. Microsoft is coasting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    They are like a stalled truck ever so slowly reducing speed until its inertia runs dry. Mac OS X is more than Microsoft can manage, and the Linux Desktops are squeezing Microsoft fiercely from below. Microsoft has found itself battling on too many fronts, none of which they can win on price. Microsoft will be a very important chapter in the history books, but that is about it.

  155. a small discovery by cg0def · · Score: 1

    I was wondering what happend of all the idiots that were barelly passing the computer science classes in my college years but I guess they got jobs at MS. This is by far the most user UNFRIENDLY interface that I have seen. Do those idiots at MS think that people really like the XP look? Cause I know of countless users that want nothing other than the way Windows "used to look". Also the control pannel looks rediculous. It is like they wrote down a list of the worst design decisions ever maid by KDE, Gnome, and MacOS X and put all of them together in Longhorn. Well this gives me one more reason to just pretend that Longhorn was never released only MS will never let me live in my dream world. After all unless I upgrade they don't get any money.

    If they are still complaining that there is too much piracy after a product like Longhorn they are compleare assho***. Longhorn needs a miracle to be still on top of things at release time. After all MS is giving over 1-1/2 years head start to Apple and all the OSS projects. Oh yeah and plus by the time Longhorn comes out the whole hardware in most computers would be compleatelly different from design time. How's that 1gb of ram sound now?

  156. If Longhorn GUI is so bad.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....WHY do Linux GUI developers (if that isn't a contradiction in terms) spend their entire lives trying to recreate the look and feel of Windows 95/98/XP in Linux ?

  157. Absolutely by Rui+del-Negro · · Score: 1

    I agree about the selection. How hard could it be for them to put a thicker border on the currently selected button, like they do on virtually all other dialog boxes...?

    The power icon with a closed circle is for power off; you'll probably find it on your TV's power button. The power icon with the broken circle is for stand by (soft off); you'll find it on your TV's remote control. Usually with no text, in either case.

    I don't think there is any generic icon for "restart" (the concept doesn't really apply to most appliances). A spark seems reasonably good to me. Two "turning" arrows could work, too, but it would be too similar to the "switch user" icon.

    BTW, personally I would prefer them to put the log off and switch user buttons in the same dialog box as the shutdown, stand by and restart buttons. I'd also like to see a "lock workstation" button that worked even when fast user switching is enabled.

    RMN
    ~~~

    1. Re:Absolutely by Storlek · · Score: 1

      The power icon with a closed circle is for power off; you'll probably find it on your TV's power button. The power icon with the broken circle is for stand by (soft off); you'll find it on your TV's remote control. Usually with no text, in either case.
      The power button on my TV is marked with the text "POWER". There's no standby button on any of my remote controls.

      Two "turning" arrows could work, too, but it would be too similar to the "switch user" icon.
      Hmm. I haven't seen the switch user icon so take this with a grain of salt, but maybe it should have an icon that looks like people? Say, a line drawing of two stick figures walking in opposite directions or something. That way, the circling arrows could be used for the restart button. (which is what I would guess it to be if I saw such an icon with no hint as to what it meant)

      --
      Bears don't normally eat things that talk and move backwards.
    2. Re:Absolutely by Rui+del-Negro · · Score: 1

      Your remote doesn't have a button to turn the TV screen off (but keep the remote receiver working)? That's stand by (soft off) mode. The icon on the remote should be identical to the one in XP's "standby" button. The power button on the actual TV set should turn the TV completely off (including the remote receiver), and should have an icon idential to the one XP uses for "shutdown". If not, your TV / remote are very unusual.

      I haven't seen a TV with "power" written on it (in any language) for a long, long time. All my TVs since 1988 or so have just the "power" icon (circle with a vertical line inside it). The same goes for nearly all my computer monitors (I think I have a couple of old Philips that do have text). That way they can sell the exact same model in a lot of different countries.

      Since most NTSC models are different anyway, maybe some manufacturers still write "power" on the sets sold in the USA. I know that in some american cities, pedestrian lights have "walk" and "don't walk" written on them. Maybe everyone there is colour-blind and picture-blind but very litterate...? ;-)

      RMN
      ~~~

    3. Re:Absolutely by drew · · Score: 1

      The power icon with a closed circle is for power off; you'll probably find it on your TV's power button. The power icon with the broken circle is for stand by (soft off); you'll find it on your TV's remote control. Usually with no text, in either case.

      yes, but in this example, the two buttons do exactly the same thing. the only difference is that one is on the remote and one is on the TV. so we have two slightly differnt icons with exactly the same meaning.

      of course, the power button on my tv actually says "power", without an icon. any other appliances that i can think of off the top of my head (playstation, dvd player) all use the open circle on the device itself and (if applicable) the remote. so to me, that icon means on/off just as much as (if not more so) than the closed circle icon.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    4. Re:Absolutely by drew · · Score: 1

      The power button on the actual TV set should turn the TV completely off (including the remote receiver), and should have an icon idential to the one XP uses for "shutdown". If not, your TV / remote are very unusual.

      i don't know what kind of tv you have, but on every tv i've ever used (that had a remote), the remote receiver is always on while it is plugged in, whether you turn the tv off via the remote or via the button on the tv, so there is no difference between the power button on the tv and the one on the remote. same with any other home electronic equipment that had a remote.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    5. Re:Absolutely by Rui+del-Negro · · Score: 1

      All my TVs (and in fact every TV I've ever seen) turns off the receiver when you use the actual power button (on the TV). My DVD player and VCR are always on standby as long as they're plugged in, but all the TVs have a real "off" mode.

      I don't theink they can use the "power off" icon unless they really do cut the power completely (safety regulations). If parts of it remain powered, they have to use the "stand by" icon.

      RMN
      ~~~

    6. Re:Absolutely by drew · · Score: 1

      All my TVs (and in fact every TV I've ever seen) turns off the receiver when you use the actual power button (on the TV)

      odd, i've never even heard of that before. seems like it would be frustrating to sit down and grab the remote only to discover that the last person to use the tv had hit the power button on the tv instead of on the remote. (says the guy who moved over three months ago and still hasn't figured out where his universal remote got packed...)

      before this thread i had never even realized that there were in fact two different symbols. the symbols in xp always seemed so uselessly / meaninglessly similar to me that i just ignored them and wnet by the words. now that my curiosity has been piqued, i just went looking through my entire house and out of all of my electronic equipment and all of the various remote controls that i know where to find, one of my monitors has the "power off" symbol. somewhere between a third and a half say 'power' or 'off'. maybe another third have the "standby symbol", and the rest either say "power (standby symbol)" or "| / (standby symbol)". (that last one seems particularly silly to me now that i actually look at it).

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    7. Re:Absolutely by Rui+del-Negro · · Score: 1

      No, they don't do the same thing (or at least they shouldn't). The one on the remote should always be a "soft off" button (turn screen off, leave receiver on), with the standby icon (open circle with line). The one on the TV (if it uses a closed circle icon) should be a "real" power cut-off button. Most TVs do have a real "off" button. Most DVDs and VCRs have only a "standby" button (sometimes there's a real power cut-off button at the back).

      RMN
      ~~~

  158. Rip Off by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

    The screen shots look like a rip off of Mac OSX and GNOME. Everything but the dock...

    --


    I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
  159. Another Al Gore Rimshot! by ppp · · Score: 1

    Couldn't you get Monica Lewinsky in there too?

    1. Re:Another Al Gore Rimshot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A cow [no offense] that sucks big time... hrm,.. I think you'd have a hard time working that into a Longhorn rant.

  160. Re:When will we see another major update to the GU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When are we going to see another jump like that

    Probably shortly after Apple decides to update its interface.

  161. Longhorn is a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what a disappointment. if that was all the hype Longhorn was about i hope they don't expect anyone to pay extra for that. apparently its very slow too.

  162. Classic View in Control Panel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does that take you to Windows XP Control Panel or does it take you back to Windows 98/2000 type Control Panel?

  163. slow, big, and ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what's slow like a snail, big like an elephant, and ugly like an opossum? Microsoft Longhorn!

    im my opinion any well customized Linux desktop looks better, is certainly faster, and has a much smaller memory footprint. at the moment everyone is switching to Linux anyways which means Windows is clearly on the way out. Poor Microsoft...

  164. ITUNES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pre-installed DRM- you mean like iTunes?

    Yeah, Macs restrict your freedom too, even more than Windows does.

  165. Why switch? by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1
    MS really has done nothing to advance their mainstream OS for the last eight years or so. A bit of eye candy here or there...

    They've had a hard enough time motivating people away from Win95/98 with significant numbers of people finding no real reason to change. Given how hard it has been to get a good uptake of XP, how hard will it be to get people to move from XP to Longhorn? It is going to be a very hard sell.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  166. BSD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm...did anyone else notice that in it's minimized version, the third icon down in the first column in the Explorer (NOT IE) screenshot looks like the BSD Daemon?

  167. sell your MSFT stocks before they tank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i was lucky and followig the advice of my broker i've sold my Microsoft stocks a couple of weeks ago with minimal loss. seems now its the time to dump those suckers before MSFT declines even further.

  168. Apropos! by Corpus_Callosum · · Score: 2, Funny
    I could pop a Ferrari engine into a Pinto, and this guy would complain about the air freshener hanging from the mirror.

    ...see, I'd be complaining about how the Pinto suddenly started flipping itself with its own torque...

    No, it wouldn't flip itself -- as soon as the rear bumper touched the ground it would blow up!
    I know we are talking about windows, so it is no coincidence, but this exchange is so incredibly apropos!

    I challenge others to so colorfully draw metaphors of Microsoft's Longhorn adventure!
    --
    The reason that it can be true that 1+1 > 2 is that very peculiar nonzero value of the + operator
  169. Is it me? by harris+s+newman · · Score: 0

    Or does this just look too much like XP Pro? I really don't see that much difference to justify calling it a new OS.

  170. Oh my god.... by rbochan · · Score: 1

    And what do those screenshots tell us anyways?

    They killed Clippy!

    Now if that little "Your computer might be at risk" thingie doesn't cry out of an appearance by Clippy, I don't know what does.

    --
    ...Rob
    The American Dream isn't an SUV and a house in the suburbs; it's Don't Tread On Me.
  171. Even Worse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The panties were his!

  172. The Irony: A Historical Perspective... by eRondeau · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has only one thing to thank for its success today: IBM. In 1980, IBM was getting its butt kicked in the exploding desktop computer market by companies like Commodore, Atari, and Apple. And IBM was in a big hurry to join the party. IBM had all the hardware plans for its new 8088 desktop computer in place, but the operating system software was a much different story. The problem was, IBM was a huge, bloated company with layer upon layer of management and bureaucracy that stood in the way of accomplishing anything quickly. Even IBM's own leadership optimistically guessed that it would take them 2-3 years to build a working operating system from scratch. Clearly this would not do. They had only one year to get their new computer to market, and IBM could not do it themselves. In July 1980 the founder of a small software company called "Microsoft" answered a phone call and very soon after met with IBM's top executives. Bill Gates confidently said that only he could write the code IBM needed in the time available -- nobody else in the world was up to the task. But in order to do it, Microsoft wanted to keep full control of their software. This was completely unheard of -- a brash little programmer playing hardball with one of the richest companies in the world. However IBM realized they were stuck between a rock and hard place and Bill Gates was right. If they wanted their operating system within a year, they had to agree. So IBM and Microsoft entered into a deal that essentially saw IBM make money by selling the hardware, while Microsoft made money by selling IBM copies of their OS. IBM's PC was released on August 12, 1981 running exclusively on Microsoft software -- and the rest is history. Of course almost 25 years later the irony is clear. In 2005 Microsoft has become IBM -- the bloated, bureaucratic dinosaur that now stands in the way of its own success. Admittedly developing Longhorn must be a massive undertaking, however so was MS-DOS 1.0 back in 1980. The development cycle of Longhorn is now five years (and counting) with no firm end in sight. Meanwhile the development time of virtually every other product is getting shorter and shorter. Perhaps Microsoft needs a history lesson, or at least a sharper focus on what it is really trying to accomplish. That is what Steve Jobs brought back to Apple, and that is what Microsoft now desperately needs. In the ocean there's always a bigger fish. In technology there's always a smaller, faster, and more responsive competitor.

  173. Great! by jav1231 · · Score: 1

    I, for one, hope it fails miserably. I can dream that M$ would pin their hopes on it and bet the bank and slowly go bankrupt or at least be reduced to actually having to COMPETE with other software makers, but that's just a dream. The screenshots look far too much like Win2k3 and XP for anyone to be visually blown away at this point.

  174. duh by darth_linux · · Score: 1

    see subject

    --
    Power to the Penguin!
  175. What about Indigo??? by speedplane · · Score: 1

    In nearly every review I read about Longhorn all they mention are the new graphics engine (avalon), and their new file system (winfs).
    (Honestly, who really cares about the new graphics engine? I'm perfectly comfortable in a shell. ooh animated windows)
    The file system is pretty cool, but the glaring ommision in any review is their new messaging subsystem. Indigo will provide an even easier way for computers to communicate. In fact, it will be just as easy to create a native application as a network application.
    Even though the average user probably wont see the difference, new software will be more seemlesly internet based than ever before!

    --
    Fast Federal Court and I.T.C. updates
  176. Screenshots *have* to be the worst comparison! by HiThere · · Score: 1

    I mean really, it's not like you're stuck with the default background, even on MSWind.

    Screenshots are used as comparisons because they are easy, not because they say anything important. (I've known it to happen, but only once or twice.)

    And this isn't to say that I expect anything laudible of Longhorn. Everything I've noticed is something that is either insignificant or terrible (but I'm not believing their claims of stability...that might be better). But this has to be a boneheaded basis for a technical site to compare the systems. (I'll grant that we don't have much other basis, but that means that we don't have much of any basis.)

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  177. WinHell? by BalorTFL · · Score: 1

    So if the alpha's called WinHec, what will Beta 1 be called?

    1. Re:WinHell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a retard aren't you?

  178. Found it! by Clueless+Moron · · Score: 2, Informative
    Ok, I finally found the icon definitions here. They're the ISO/IEC/JTC1 Graphical Symbols for Office Equipment.

    In short, a "|" really means "power on", as in physically connected to the mains, while "0" means "power off", as in physically disconnected.

    When combined with an unbroken circle, as found on older monitors, it's a power toggle switch. The button is supposed to be sunken in while in the on position, and popped out while off. But it is still a physical power switch.

    The broken-circle with line, as found on newer stuff, is "stand-by". Functionally, on my monitor and where I can find it the key part about its behaviour is that it only signals the device to turn off or on; it does not physically disconnect the power.

    Still no sign of that green exploding circle icon though, but with a bit more training we might all eventually be able to shut down a Longhorn machine with confidence...

    1. Re:Found it! by Storlek · · Score: 1

      Huh. Wonder if the same people who designed those symbols also came up with the symbols on laundry tags. ("Do not put this shirt in a circle or triangle!")

      --
      Bears don't normally eat things that talk and move backwards.
  179. Longhorn Beta is *Disappearing* by rfunches · · Score: 1

    When I saw this story in the Slashdot drop-down in Firefox, the first thing my mind saw was Longhorn Beta is Disappearing.

    Too bad it isn't. I'd pay Copperfield or some other magician to do it, too.

    1. Re:Longhorn Beta is *Disappearing* by mbd1475 · · Score: 1

      lol I saw the same thing at first glance!

  180. Re: 8mb by eggsome · · Score: 1

    Actually at one stage they advertised the fact that you could run Win95 with 4mb of ram. I've seen it done, it was not pretty.

    --
    If they made a movie of your life, would anybody buy a ticket?
  181. Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm starting to think that they're at the same point Apple was at in the 90s: every attempt to build a modern successor to OS 9 from scratch crashed and burned horribly.

    That's an interesting point and I have to say that I agree to a certain extent that that's what they seem to be trying to do. What I don't understand is why.

    Apple HAD to make a break from classic Mac OS, because it was really pretty awful. NT isn't awful. It's not great, but it's in nowhere like the trouble OS 8 and OS 9 were in.

    Microsoft really could do what Apple's doing and introduce new bundled features on a year-to-year basis, or even sell them as $50 Plus Packs, and maintain a steady income without either losing market share or alienating customers. They don't need to be pulling the "All New Windows" every few years like they did in the '90s... they reached a reasonably stable peak in terms of what they're really capable of doing right with Windows 2000.

    They've got a mature product they can build on, sell new accessories for it, bundle it as "Windows 2004, you get Windows 2000, the XP Plus Pack, the GUI Glitz Plus Pack, and a special this-release-only sidebar, a combined value of almost $300, for $150. For only $75 more you get the Professional Pack, normally $125, in Windows 2004 Professional".

    That's how a mature company sells mature products, and it's what microsoft really needs to do. Because, Microsoft is a mature company, they've got the brass ring and there's no way they can significantly boost Windows sales over what they'd be without building a "successor OS". They don't need to act like a startup now, it's just getting in the way of doing the best job and making the most money.

    1. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by BandwidthHog · · Score: 1

      The only angle that makes sense to me is the cynical one: they need to get everybody to upgrade to the Next Big Thing, so that said Next Big Thing can break compatibility with various protocols and file formats that they are in contention with.

      But I do wholly agree with you otherwise. I think they'd be better off doing maintenance and improvement on what they've already got rather than trying to do a massive rebuild every few years. But on the other hand, their last few Next Big Things have turned out to be a warming over of the Last Big Thing, merely packaged as something new, so you could say they're already taking that advice. I think Win2k will be the basic architecture for the next ten years or so, regardless of how it's packaged and marketed.

      I guess a lot of it is primal fear, because even if it takes many years before the decline is apparent, they have clearly peaked. Once you've got it all, the only way to go is down.

      --

      Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
    2. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by daviddennis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Apple's approach is not going to work for Windows users.

      Apple users, such as myself, are enthusiasts. When Tiger comes out, we'll be in line at the Apple store, or waiting at our mailbox for it. But that's because we love Apple products and trust Steve, our deity, to pull something wonderful out of the his hat for us. So much for $129.

      Windows' deity is Bill, and frankly Windows users seem to have a love/hate relationship with him. Consider Windows XP Service Pack 2. Nobody's being asked to pay $129 for it, even though it took about the same amount of work to produce as Tiger. It's free. And the Kool-Aid drinkers in major corporations are still rejecting it, because they know it will give them nothing but throbbing migraines for the next month. Such is the reputation of Microsoft and its updates.

      So look. If you're having trouble getting people to accept your essential update for free, can you imagine how tough it is to get people to pay for the next version?

      So Bill's minions have no choice but to try and make their new system the greatest thing since sliced bread. Frankly, I don't see how they're going to do it because the pain of moving to a new Windows version is just plain huge, and people know this now.

      D

    3. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 1

      Once you've got it all, the only way to go is down.

      Fire laterally hard enough and you'll make orbital velocity. You can only hover on one engine through brute force for so long, at some point you have to hit the steering jets, and add another vector to your trajectory.

      Microsoft's got to quit emulating Microsoft and start emulating IBM.

    4. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 1

      Apple's approach is not going to work for Windows users.

      I'm not suggesting Apple's approach, I'm suggesting something that Microsoft MIGHT be able to pull off toget the same results.

      Apple dosn't sell "Plus Packs" and bundles and do all that Big Top Walmart Blue Light Special Offer hokum that I'm suggesting. Microsoft used to, and they can do it again... if they can come up with compelling add-ons for Windows.

      Nobody's being asked to pay $129 for (SP2), even though it took about the same amount of work to produce as Tiger.

      That's because SP2 doesn't include new features, it's all bugfixes. They're saving up features (or at least promising them) to go into in Longhorn, the next big Painful Upgrade. If instead they release them bit by bit as paid-for enhancements (REAL enhancements) to Windows they CAN sell them, and then Longhorn would just become a bundle of existing Plus Packs and maybe a preview of the next Plus Pack.

    5. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by thoth · · Score: 1

      Microsoft does sell Plus Packs for XP - two of them. One regular plus pack, and one "digital media" plus pack.

      Well, it looks like maybe they've combined them into one "Super" plus pack now:

      http://www.microsoft.com/windows/plus/PlusHome.a sp

      Anyway, there might be more changes in the future, I'm sure they will want some $$$ for anti-virus and spyware protection. Even though it seems like a conflict of interest for them to charge money for that.

    6. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > They've got a mature product they can build on, sell new accessories for it

      I disagree. A mature product is a complete product that can stand on its own. Windows is not. Bundled software aside, you need to purchase applications.

      The problem with Windows is that it's just an OS with GUI and utilities. People invest more on the applications. Unless there is a good reason, like a new application that requires a new OS feature, nobody will bother to upgrade. Microsoft should focus more on the applications.

      If history is correct, when a product becomes more diversified without clear distinction, it's a sign of disintegration. For example, Apple created so many different lines of Macs as its share started to decline.

      We see the same in Microsft Windows. 95, 98, NT, ME, XP, 2000, 2003, Longhorn, etc. had to be devised to try to solve existing problems, not solely to enhance.

      If you have a good product, you don't create over abundance of different lines. You only have one or two good lines. The reason there are different versions of Windows now is not solely to try to make money from upgrades, but because they have to make new OS just to stop the decline.

      OS vendors don't make money from home users. They make money from large entities. These enterprises don't care about Plus Packs and such. Once server market slides, it's a matter of time for desktop market. MS must come up with solutions to the problem of decline, otherwise they wouldn't be putting Longhorn out the door by removing features.

    7. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      That's because SP2 doesn't include new features

      Well, except the security center, the updated browser with the popup blocker, the no execute feature, the IE Add-on Manager, the revamped firewall, and Windows Update 5.

    8. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 1

      Microsoft does sell Plus Packs for XP - two of them. One regular plus pack, and one "digital media" plus pack.

      Interesting. They're certainly marketing them effectively... so effectively I've never seen or heard of them.

      I'm sure they will want some $$$ for anti-virus and spyware protection. Even though it seems like a conflict of interest for them to charge money for that.

      Conflict of Interest is, well, that's understating the situation. Especially since it would be SO easy for them to fix most of the avenues those things use to get into the system in the first place.

    9. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 1

      the security center, the updated browser with the popup blocker, the no execute feature, the IE Add-on Manager, the revamped firewall, and Windows Update 5

      Like I said, SP2 doesn't include any new features.

      Look. People don't buy software to run it, they buy software to do something with it. That's why Microsoft is where they are... people want to do something with their computer, they want to run software that does things they want to do, and they buy Windows to run that software. Changes in an OS that don't give you a way to do something you couldn't do before aren't going to be perceived as new features, they're going to be seen as bug fixes. People are willing to buy bug fixes from a third party, but they're not expecting to buy bug fixes from the company that sold them the bugs. If the bugs are big and important enough, they may buy the fixes anyway, but they're not going to be happy about it and you can't get them to do that very often. If it's a really big bug, and you really can't be blamed for it, and you really worked hard to fix it, then maybe you can slide it in without people getting ticked off. But Microsoft's not in that situation.

    10. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I must be reading a different language. I thought the definition of new was "having existed or having been made but a short time" (Source:Webster)

      I'll go turn on the security center service on my sp1 system now. Wait, it doesn't exist in SP1, because it's NEW TO SP2.

      Just because your version of reality may or may not perceive something as 'new' doesn't change the fact that it's new.

      This is a statement of fact, new code, new service, new feature, new.

    11. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 1

      I thought the definition of new was "having existed or having been made but a short time"

      You must be reading a different language. In English when someone talks about "new feature" they usually mean something that is both "new" and a "feature". Now I know that there's no hard and fast rules in English, and it's full of special cases, but I'm drawing a blank on this one... I haven't run into it before.

    12. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      New: "having existed or having been made but a short time "

      Feature: "a prominent part or characteristic ", "a special attraction", " something offered to the public or advertised as particularly attractive"

      (Source: Websters)

      So, for example, a pop-up blocker in IE and the security center not having been included before SP2 and hyped by nearly every review of SP2, as well as Microsoft press releases, etc, would easily satisfy the definition of 'new features'.

      Yes, I would consider a dialog box that pops up and then sits in my tray to be prominent. I absolutely consider something that modifies the content of websites by blocking pop-up windows to be prominent and a special attraction as well.

    13. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 1

      Feature: "a prominent part or characteristic ", "a special attraction", " something offered to the public or advertised as particularly attractive"

      The last is probably the closest, but it's really incomplete. Companies frequently advertise things as "new features" that aren't any such thing.

      I consider the security center as just another part of Microsoft's attempt to fix their core security problems without actually fixing the thing that's actually causing the problem. It's not a new feature, it's a bug fix.

      The pop-up blocker might be considered a new feature if Microsoft had come out with it before everyone else had already done it. They wouldn't need to be first with it, even, but coming last after everyone's screaming for it? Nobody's going to see that as a "new feature". That's like being the last to install standard air-bags and then talking up your safety record because you have air-bags. Nobody's going to take that seriously.

    14. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      The security center alerts you if your software firewall, antivirus or automatic updates are enabled/disabled or out of date.

      Why is that a bug fix? What bug in the firewall, av software or automatic updates is being fixed? This is a central notification system with a new standard interface.

    15. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by argent · · Score: 1

      What bug in the firewall, av software or automatic updates is being fixed?

      The fact that you need a firewall, A/V software, and automatic updates to work with the same level of security that you did before Microsoft came up with the whole idea of integrating the Internet into the OS (with ActiveX in IE, Active Desktop, Security Zones, and so on), so you need to have a program that monitors them and warns you if you need to do someting about them.

      Let's suppose there was a tool company that made a power tool with a plastic guard, and had been making it with a plastic guard for years, and when as the result of a lawsuit and bad publicity they came up with a gadget you could attach to the guard to let you know when the plastic was degrading and you had to replace or readjust it.

      Would you call the "security gard monitor" a new feature or a bugfix?

    16. Re:Why do they need Longhorn? by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      If I could check the plastic myself, a new feature.

      If I couldn't, a bugfix.

      I could simply check my AV, Firewall or AU manually, this does it automatically, it's a feature.

  182. OT: bad drivers by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    Great. people that didn't pay attention in drivers ed. class. (Sorry to you non USAians where it may be different) YELLOW means stop. If you're going too fast to safely execute a stop, then you are allowed to continue.

    (I know that's a nitpick but if people actually heeded drivers ed. instead of sleeping through it, maybe it wouldn't be safer to strap a rocket pack to your arse and fly around the sears tower than to drive there from four miles away.)

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    1. Re:OT: bad drivers by eh2o · · Score: 1

      it kind of depends on where you are, though. yellow lights in san francisco city are incredibly long. if you just stopped as soon as you saw yellow, you'd have some pissed off people behind you.

      but out in rural areas the yellow tend to be pretty short.

      its a valid nitpick, but with all the photo enforced lights getting installed lately, I think people may finally start to respect the signals.

    2. Re:OT: bad drivers by xtracto · · Score: 1

      As the AC replied Yellow does not always means stop, as in UK semaphonres yellow also comes AFTER red so it will be more like "Proceed with Caution"

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
  183. tired of the Apple fan fiction by cahiha · · Score: 2, Interesting
    the hype of competitors [Mac OS X]

    I'm tired of every story on Linux or Windows being used by Macintosh fanboys to attempt to promote Apple. Every time it's the same lies, distortions, and inaccuracies. What do I have to do in order not to see that kind of junk anymore?

    As for Tiger, just about every supposed "innovation" in it (scripting, RSS, search, Dashboard, Video Chat, etc.) is either not new, or even a blatant rip-off from some other company. As far as I'm concerned, Apple seems to be back to their old evil ways: patents, false marketing claims, and blatant rip-offs. The engineers who ran MacOS into the ground seem to be in charge with OS X again. The software architecture still sucks relative to something modern. But, unlike a few years ago, Apple doesn't even have a research lab anymore, nor do they even manufacture their hardware anymore.

    Guys, please spare us both the debate: keep Apple fan fiction to the Apple section.
    1. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So, I remember when Apple was really hard core NIH. Kernel, graphics, expansion buses, input buses, networking, API's you name it, everything was really weird and unique. And they had their own robotic factory. Yay. And they took a lot of flak for being too weird and unique and reinventing the wheel all the time. Yet on some level they probably thought they were being really "innovative" by doing so much reinventing. You would have to buy a lot of 3rd party stuff to get interoperability on the pre-OSX Mac, if you could get it at all.

      In my opinion the post-1998 hardware and software have really gone the other way. PCI, USB, AGP, ATA/SATA, DVI, these are all familiar. BSD, OpenGL, PDF, LDAP, SMB, yes HTML and RSS, these are all familiar and not invented at Apple. And these things are much of what is under the hood on MacOS X.

      So now should we berate them or praise them for adopting good industry standards and not reinventing more of them? Maybe this qualifies as a little less "innovative" but IMHO this is scoring much higher on the "pragmatic and timely" axis.

      NVIDIA doesn't build any of their own hardware either. So is that good or bad again?

    2. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by cahiha · · Score: 1
      So now should we berate them or praise them for adopting good industry standards and not reinventing more of them? Maybe this qualifies as a little less "innovative" but IMHO this is scoring much higher on the "pragmatic and timely" axis.

      I'm not berating them for complying with industry standards. And compliance with industry standards is almost completely unrelated to whether a company is innovative or not. I'm not even berating them for ripping off ideas from other companies because I think it's perfectly OK to build on other people's ideas.

      What I am berating them for is that:
      • Apple is ripping off other people's ideas and misrepresenting them as their own.
      • Apple is accusing other people of ripping them off, for things they did not even come up with themselves.
      • Apple is patenting other people's ideas as their own.
      • Apple is misrepresenting the quality and performance of their products in a way that puts even Microsoft to shame.
      • Apple is doing a lousy job when it comes to systems engineering.
      • Apple is not investing in research, nor contributing to computer science research, yet they are misrepresenting themselves as a kind of "innovation leader" in the industry.
      • Apple is claiming to be open source friendly, but they have released little of value to the open source community, and they are misrepresenting their system as "the better Linux".

      Apple could be a nice company: they don't have to do any of those things in order to be successful. While they aren't ahead technically, they generally do an excellent job in terms of making things look good and stylish, and they do decent end-user application development, and that's what they should focus on.

      As it is, Apple is repeating with OS X what they did with the old Mac OS: it looks prettier and prettier, but its internals were obsolete already when they bought NeXT, and they aren't updating them in any meaningful sense. OS X will fall apart over the next decade, just like Mac OS fell apart over the previous decade. And PC vendors, Windows, and Linux will shamelessly copy whatever little visual and design twists end users find appealing in Apple products; technologically, they are already ahead of Apple anyway.
    3. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by zpok · · Score: 1

      Thurrot, is that you?

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    4. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google shows Thurrot to be some kind of Windows advocate. Did I advocate Windows anywhere?

      For the record: I say, forget both Windows and OS X, just use Linux. Linux isn't technically a lot better than either of them, but at least it doesn't cost you an arm and a leg or give you the constant hassling that comes with either of those other platforms.

    5. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by zpok · · Score: 1

      So, on a windows article you're advocating Linux? And this is different how exactly from people advocating Apple? And so on and so forth...

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    6. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The interesting thing is after this week they will no longer have any kind of shelter from open review and discussion of Tiger. If it's internals are as shaky and obsolete as you say, this fact should come through clearly in the product reviews to follow.

      We won't see non-NDA reviews of Longhorn for a year and a half (even if things go well). And the ones that do pop out prior to RTM - "previews" not "reviews" - will always be able to fall back on "ah, but it's a beta, the shipping product will look a lot nicer". Which is what they said last year.

    7. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The interesting thing is after this week they will no longer have any kind of shelter from open review and discussion of Tiger. If it's internals are as shaky and obsolete as you say, this fact should come through clearly in the product reviews to follow.

      Tiger is no more obsolete than previous versions of OS X, so why would the reviews be any different than previous reviews? There is no unbiased review of Macintosh because most people simply don't give a damn either way, and the few people that are still interested in the platform are zealots for which anything Apple puts out is great.

      We won't see non-NDA reviews of Longhorn for a year and a half (even if things go well). And the ones that do pop out prior to RTM - "previews" not "reviews" - will always be able to fall back on "ah, but it's a beta, the shipping product will look a lot nicer". Which is what they said last year.

      It is really laughable that you think this is even a contest beetween Macintosh and anything else. Macintosh isn't significant anymore, and comparisons between Macintosh and Windows are pointless. Which is why Apple fanboys should STFU and limit their zealotry to Apple newsgroups.

      The rest of the world is tired of hearing about the platform.

    8. Re:tired of the Apple fan fiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, on a windows article you're advocating Linux? And this is different how exactly from people advocating Apple? And so on and so forth...

      I wasn't "advocating Linux", I was responding to your silly claim that I was advocating Windows over Mac OS by pointing out what I would advocate.

      Another difference is that you Apple zealots make unsubstantiated and often erroneous claims about innovation and superiority of your pet platform and company. I don't claim that Linux is better than Windows or OS X, merely that Linux works well enough and is distributed under a free and open source license.

  184. and the obligatory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    - Longhorn: where's the beef?

    - Longhorn: all mouseclicks and no cattle

    - Longhorn: all screenshots and no steak

  185. What's the killer feature? The search thing? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    So it's a somewhat more bloated XP with the utilities shifted around, and a new search deal? No wonder it took so long. Not that it matters, XP has been barly began to catch on. I think XP only over-took Win98 about a year ago.

    I must be missing something. What's going to have people dumping the XP boxes and running to their local computer store to buy a new PC?

  186. Longhorn will be the decision point by guet · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't bother waiting till next year, you may as well make your decision now, after all, Tiger is here : )

    By the looks of things Longhorn won't ship in 2006 - it's now mid 2005 and they haven't even hit the first beta stage.

  187. Copland? by snowdon · · Score: 1

    Does this smell of the Copland debacle prior to Mac OS X's introduction? Apple worked for years on their own OS (Copland). They gave up and bought NeXT and Jobs.

  188. I hope I'm not duping: by CarlinWithers · · Score: 1
    Did anyone else notice this?

    From TFA: This one's bizarre, but we heard at lunch today that Apple is unhappy with the PowerPC production at IBM and will be switching to Intel-compatible cheaps this very year. Yeah, seriously.,

    Can anyone either confirm or deny this? I sincerely hope it doesn't happen. PowerPC is a much better architecture and is as much of a reason to switch to a Mac as OSX is. IMHO, anyways.

  189. So when LH comes out... by stealth.c · · Score: 1

    ...will there THEN be any compelling reason to upgrade from W2K? I submit that there will not. =P

  190. Sheep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So many people will adopt longhorn it won't even be funny even know microsoft is just using them for there money, its sad really and people don't see it. Alot of foolishness on alot of peoples part oh its new I gotta get it.

  191. Scrub the code. by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

    How should longhorn be better?

    Simple: Just scrub the code. Top to bottom, every single goddamned line if need be. Eliminate any possibility of a buffer overflow. Optimize routines. I'd bet Microsoft could cut the HD footprint of XP in half, double its speed and quarter the memory requirements if they spent four years and a billion bucks working on it. Create an operating system that the engineers can finally be proud of.

    I would actually PAY for my copy of Windows if they did this.

  192. Indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My friend had her computer "on" for 2 weeks because she didn't know that to turn it OFF you need to click on START!

  193. pentium-m 2.40 GHZ? by Mr+44 · · Score: 1

    no such beast. You mean Pentium4-M, which is a totally different beast. The pentium M is indeed faster than its clock speed would lead you to believe.

    You are right though, bus speed is a big factor too...

  194. The Teletubbies hijacked XP and now it looks like. by Jerry · · Score: 2, Funny

    ..they are hold LongHorn for ransom.

    LongHorn looks like just another XP skin, just a bit uglier.

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  195. Slowhorn or Bloathorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    looks like they should have more appropriately called it Slowhorn or Bloathorn. if that's the future of windows i am definitely also going to switch to linux. we use linux at work and most of my friends are using linux now. seems like it offers you more flexibility in customizing the looks of your desktop, runs faster, and uses up less memory than any windows version. plus i won't have to worry about viruses or spyware either.

  196. MOD PARENT UP, MOD GRANDPARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Hear hear. Enough with the karma-whoring politically-correct faux-sympathy horseshit.

  197. Runs fine in 64MB too by bluGill · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As I discovered after installing it, Windows XP runs just fine in 64 Meg of RAM on a 400 Mhz PII. Course this was a lab system that only had to run the latest version of our backup software, and a VNC server. (ECC RAM is required more is out of the question) I do all my real work on machines running FreeBSD, but when you make your money from Microsoft Windows you have to test with it once in a while.

    1. Re:Runs fine in 64MB too by rjshields · · Score: 1
      Windows XP runs just fine in 64 Meg of RAM
      Did you hear the hard disk making a lot of noise? That's the sound of your memory being paged as the machine runs out of physical RAM.
      --
      In this world nothing is certain but death, taxes and flawed car analogies.
    2. Re:Runs fine in 64MB too by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Surprisingly there wasn't a lot of swapping once we got logged in. Remember though we are only running one app that doesn't take a lot of memory, and we don't do anything extensive with XP. When the machine boots it swaps a bit out to disk, but it never has to bring most of that in because we don't use it.

    3. Re:Runs fine in 64MB too by toddestan · · Score: 1

      And I've installed Windows XP on a Pentium 120 (socket 5), with 128MB of 128MB of 72pin memory. Install took forever, but it ran reasonably well browsing the internet on FireFox. However, I didn't do this for any other reason than to see if it could be done.

  198. Re:Wow! Longhorn will do what Linux distros do now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any app on Mac OS X can already do this, if they choose -- it's not a "feature" fo the OS, it's just easy to do, as files and bundles are able to have self-contained icons.

    Photoshop does this -- instead of just having the OS draw a thumbnail every time you look at it, it generates one when you save the file. OmniGraffle does this, too -- and it's files aren't "just" images. Any app can draw it's own icons and attach them to documents.

    The only reason it's a "feature", is because it's currently impossible in Windows, for legacy (i.e. DOS) reasons.

  199. WinME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Yeah, it's got an improved driver and development model

    Isn't that what they said about Windows Millenium Edition?

  200. wtf is this, the console game industry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WHY do people care about screenshots? it's an OS! tell me about security model, stability, application and hardware compatability.

    or are we demonstrating the market's predilection to juxtapose operating system with user environment?

  201. Nowadays we can complain by tentimestwenty · · Score: 1

    If you're building a custom house or buying a condo you damn well are going to see what the interior design looks like before you put your money down. You might go in and change it later, but the default design should be rock solid. Remember, we now have computers to plan all these things out in advance.

  202. They already got the rows of tabs by tentimestwenty · · Score: 1

    The control panels have always had multiple rows of tabs. Remember all those times you'd click on one and the whole row would seem to reorganize itself as if you had switched to a parallel dimension... same options, but TOTALLY different place. I've been using OS X for a few years now but I'm sure they've still got that million dollar feature.

  203. Maybe saying this right NOW is not so sensitve... by jjn1056 · · Score: 1

    Sure, people will continue to use this phrase for a long time, but maybe saying it within a few days of a really terrible train wreck is very unsensitive to the victims. It's like when I was in NYC after 9/11 they decided not to play "Independence Day" on TV because some of those pictures might really upset people who already had been through a lot.

    BTW, I think this is totally different from how Clearwater sent out a list of songs to ban if they mentioned the word peace. The first is just being sensitive to people who had just been through a terrible trama, while the second is a clear example of censorship in order to control the reaction to that event.

    A few months later "Independence Day" was back on the TV.

    I don't think it is PC to just be aware of things that are happening in the world and to people. It's not polite to stare at someones unluck, bad haircut either!

    --
    Peace, or Not?
  204. Re:The Irony: A Historical Perspective... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can I sell 'ya a paragraph?

  205. Slashdot at its best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Say anything bad about Microsoft and you get modded as "insightful". Someone who can't understand XP's buttons should be modded "dense". And someone who admits it publicly should be modded as "denser than a black hole"

  206. Re:Wow! Longhorn will do what Linux distros do now by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

    Windows XP already does it for some images and it apparently does it with PDF files (at least for me). I think it's just an expansion of something they've been trying to do for a while so it's exactly copying.

  207. Paul really needs to get out more. by mellonhead · · Score: 0, Troll

    I arrived at the blogger lunch late as well, but it was a veritable who's-who of the Windows enthusiast community. Among the people I spied in the crowd were Robert Scoble, Steven Bink, Tom Warren, Chris Pirillo, Mary Jo Foley, Todd Bishop and Ed Bott, among many others.

  208. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, yellow means "proceed with caution" / "be ready to stop". "Stand by" isn't a bad description. Yellow is not necessarily followed by red (which does mean "stop"). Some crossroads outside cities, for example, have permanent yellow lights (sometimes blinking, sometimes not). If yellow meant "stop", no one would ever be allowed to cross them.

    1. Re:No. by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Blinking yellow and blinking red do not mean the same thing as solid yellow and solid red. which is why they are blinking. If yellow didn't mean stop, why would there be blinking yellow for "proceed with caution" and blinking red for "stop, then proceed with caution"?

      There is a misconception that (in the US) yellow means proceed with caution. When in fact it means (stop the car dumbass, the light's about to turn red) It's there to give a buffer between when the stop is announced and when it's official (because there are some values of position and velocity which would be dangerous to reduce to zero before the light). It most certainly does NOT mean gun it.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    2. Re:No. by Syberghost · · Score: 1

      No, yellow means "proceed with caution" / "be ready to stop".

      You're probably going to be very angry when you get that ticket. In every state in which I've ever had a driver's license, if you can stop at the yellow and don't, it's the exact same charge as if the light had been red. The only difference is that if you're going the speed limit when the light turns yellow and you can't safely stop, you don't have to stop. If a person at your distance from the light and going the speed limit (or the maximum speed consistent with local conditions, whichever is lower) could stop, it's a red light, legally.

  209. From what I can see Longhorn is a mess... by CPNABEND · · Score: 1

    They have gutted anything we /.ers would think is cool (WINFS, etc?) - They have yet to get the OS secured, etc.

    --
    My wife doesn't listen to me either...
  210. Consumers aren't just Grandmas.. by itomato · · Score: 1

    Avalon and WinFS are?

    Consumers hardly ever care about the underlying technology.

    I never mentioned "Consumers".. I was thinking about 14-24 year-old Males. They buy a hell of a lot more computers than your Grandma.

    1. Re:Consumers aren't just Grandmas.. by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Avalon and WinFS are?

      I never suggested they would be.

      Consumers hardly ever care about the underlying technology.

      Correct. Which is why Windows "doesn't play UNIX like Linux/OS X does" is completely irrelevant to whether or not consumers pick OS X or Linux over Windows

      I never mentioned "Consumers".. I was thinking about 14-24 year-old Males. They buy a hell of a lot more computers than your Grandma.

      They probably do, but they're not even close to being the biggest purchasing demographic of computers (and the most important thing for most of them is "does it play my games ?").

  211. Longhorn Beta1 is NOT supposed to look nice!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a version released for developers and not for the general public! It is not supposed to LOOK nice. It is supposed to be STABLE and is based on the new architecture! UI comes next!

    Why can't people inform themselves before writing a lot of crap...

    1. Re:Longhorn Beta1 is NOT supposed to look nice!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, totally on the money.

      Just like winbeta.org says

      "5048 officially marks the start of what is promising to be an exciting time for the next 2 years for us in the beta world. "

  212. Re:Maybe saying this right NOW is not so sensitve. by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

    Sure, people will continue to use this phrase for a long time, but maybe saying it within a few days of a really terrible train wreck is very unsensitive to the victims.

    But there hasn't been a terrible train wreck in the past few days- not in comparison to what goes unreported except in Oddly Enough sidebars.

    Within the past year, there have been other train accidents killing 3 or 4 times the number of victims. This one has got attention because it's Japan, "not 3rd world", "they're civilized like us", "they are so safety-concious", etc.

    I am reminded of how on August 30, 1997, Taliban soldiers cut the heads off of 200 innocent people. But it didn't get any press in the USA, because a rich European was in a car crash the same day.

  213. Re:he MEANT docs... by SPY_jmr1 · · Score: 1

    that... that's the point he was making... fiendishly fast and smooth, is what i would say to discribe it.

  214. preemptive abortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for your hard drive

  215. Explorer Requires 256 by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    so uninstall IE!

  216. Search Phrase by chuckw · · Score: 1

    Was it just me, or did anyone else notice the search phrase in the find box at the bottom of the screen in some of those screenshots?

    --
    *Condense fact from the vapor of nuance*
  217. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  218. Restart icon by kybosch · · Score: 1

    I can almost "name one device with a button that has a bunch of lines organized in a circle meaning 'restart'."

    In Mac OS X Jaguar (10.2 Jagwire the cognoscenti) Apple added a round progress bar icon that animates exactly in the way you describe while the computer starts up.

    Maybe it is just coincidence? I mean it is not like given Microsoft's history that one would be led to assume that MS would copy something from Apple.

  219. Not a beta! by JonXP · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is a preview build for hardware makers to test their hardware and drivers. It is NOT a beta, it's more of an alpha. NOT feature complete, and NOT meant to show off the capabilities of Longhorn.

    Sheesh, people.

    At least have the intelligence to tell the diffrence between a beta and a preview build.

  220. slashdot users are disappointing by fu(kslashdot · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I did a statistically useless poll that validates some of my preconceived notions about how irrelevant Slashdot is. Numbers follow! 0% percent of IT departments consider slashdot worth perusing 100% percent of IT departments consider slashdot worth crap! Ymmv

  221. Slow fade to death by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > at any rate, my personal pet peeve regarding the shutdown dialog,

    This reminds me of the way XP shows the shutdown dialog, with the background screen slowly fading to gray.

    This always horrifies me, reminding me of the impending crashes in Windows that I had to suffer at a job for so long. I think I incurred a mild mental disorder from it.

    Using linux therapy in later years hasn't completely cured this illness, but at least trying to avoid Windows use helped me function normally.

    I still need Windows for games (ironically to ease my anxiety related to Windows use) but I turn off all eyecandy features and make the menu win95 style, so I don't see that fading.

  222. I like that screenshot. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 2, Funny
    I especially like the screenshot that says, "Your computer might be at risk... No firewall is turned on... blah blah blah"

    What it should say is, "Your computer might be at risk. Currently downloading: 18,432 viruses, 94% complete. These downloads will automatically install upon completion. For your convenience, you cannot cancel or stop this operation. If you disconnect the network during this time or attempt to reboot, you will be arrested under the DMCA clause that prohibits anti-circumvention with regards to the intellectual property rights of the virus authors. Microsoft. Where do you want to go today?"

    Screenshot here.

    1. Re:I like that screenshot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      after 18,432 virus definitions downloaded - that should say "about 10% complete".

  223. Looks like a cross between GNOME and OsX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who woulda thunk it

  224. BULL !!! by C0vardeAn0nim0 · · Score: 1

    i used to run KDE 3.2 in a P-II toshiba notebook with only 128 MB and it ran fine, even with firefox open. with windowmaker i could even open firefox and a later openoffice 1.9.

    all you need to do this is take some time to fine tune the interface. deactivate all eye candy, remove wallpapers, turn off all background apps ("services" in MS speak), adjust kernel parameters, et all.

    in windows XP is possible to tune the interface this way in one go via "my computer" preferences. what MS should do is to put a "wizard" in the installation media or control pannel to do this automatically. KDE has this wizard and it runs everytime a new user logs in. it have a slidebar where the user adjusts for more performance or more eye-candy.

    --
    What ? Me, worry ?
  225. Re:Wow! Longhorn will do what Linux distros do now by smash · · Score: 1
    KDE or gnome had that feature at least 3-4 years ago :D

    smash.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  226. No worries -- I have plans this Friday evening! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Good news is that now that we all know it's looking bad for Longhorn, you can still catch your spot in line at a certain store this Friday evening to get your own copy of a certain new OS that will be certailly much less disappointing :)

  227. turning Windows XP into Tiger by cahiha · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Much as I don't like Windows, all the stuff Apple claims as innovative in Tiger has already been out for Windows free or cheap for a while.

    Download Konfabulator from konfabulator.com (this is where Apple ripped off Dashboard).

    Download Google or Yahoo! desktop search for free. (Google also gives you Picasa.)

    For RSS, use Firefox and LiveBookmarks--better than Safari.

    Pretty much all the major IM clients have offered video chat for a while. I have personally used it with Yahoo! IM.

    For scripting, there are lots of choices for Windows. There are some visual scripting environments analogous to Automator, but they are a bit pricey. I think for most people, AutoHotKey is actually a better choice anyway.

    The only thing "innovative" about Tiger is that Apple is bundling that stuff with the OS. Whenever Microsoft does that, there is lots of screaming and complaining. And Linux, of course, pretty much bundles all of that in its distributions (desktop search is still a separate install, but that will be bundled as well soon).

  228. checkit yo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    porting from directx to (say) opengl is really non trivial. see, directx is designed to make things really easy for the programmer, for instance, much of the api is stateless (like a web server) so you just use it and trust that it will figure out how to actually make everything work properly. whereas opengl requires you to know alot more about design and you have to do this kind of (arguably janitorial) stuff yourself. sure a programmer might understand how to optimize a state machine and sort out all the concurrency and threading issues required for a (eg ) multithreaded c++ game, but is this really an advance. or is RAD (RGD?) a good thing, i'm guessing the huge number of pc games written using directx wouldnt exist without such a simplified set of api's... jmho

  229. the real requirements for this thing could be huge by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
    the real requirements for this thing could be huge
    Bloated new releases have been a part of the Wintel upgrade treadmill. If it is a hog, that would make Intel happy.

    It would also ensure a captive market for all those new DRM'ed CPUs (e.g. La Grande from Intel) and BIOS (something from Pheonix) that folks swore up and down they'd never buy, which just happen to be in the new boxes...

    There's a real demand for an escape path, especially something that runs on the old hardware: NT is dead, and 2000 is being put out to pasture, and many got burned in the Software Assurance scam. I'd expect that Redhat, Suse and independent companies providing linux services and support would capitalize on this.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  230. What a nice skin!!! by Eminence · · Score: 1
    Hey, they developed a great skin for WinXP up there at Redmond, WA. Where can I download one?

    What? It was supposed to be an operating system? Oh, come on...

  231. Mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fake sig spammer

    1. Re:Mod parent down by Actuator+Man · · Score: 1

      Take off every 'zig' !!

  232. Two points. by Eminence · · Score: 1
    • Human-user interface design. That was Apple in 1985.

    First, credit where it is due. That was Xerox in the 70ties, it's just that Xerox executives were not bright enough to use their own innovation and basically threw it away. Luckily, Jobs happened to be lurking in their backyard.

    And even Xerox PARC's work was based on research done on universities in late 60ties, early 70ties.

    Second, your description of how Apple scrapped a bunch of Unix daemons replacing them all with one, neat, XML configurable launchd.

    That's great. It's probably the way it should be. And that surely is innovation. But it is a very miniscule one. It's merely an improvement, not something really new.

    What Apple basically did was getting a 20-year old idea (Unix operating system), improving it some (like this launchd) and then adding a cute, well, thoughtfully designed GUI on top of it. Best of both worlds, it's stable, secure (thanks to Unix base) and it's easy to use and pleasant to look at (thanks to Apple's GUI design).

    So, sorry to say that, but it is a 20th century concept. None of what is in OS X is a fundamentally new idea or technology unknown by the late 90ties. Apple is innovative in the market sense, but not so much in technology. Nothing wrong with that, their stuff is great and I love it (saving for a PB). But let's not buy into this marketing hype about "great innovations".

    1. Re:Two points. by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1

      People thought of bell-ing the cat in the 20th century.

      Apple bell-ed it in the 21st. :D

      Hopefully though, someday everything good about OS X today will be available in a GNU OS. In the long run, operating systems should be a commodity standard. Arguing about OS X v. Windows will make as much sense as arguing for Edison's AC v. Telsa's DC. We'll all have a standard, free OS that will be able to do everything right. AC in homes; DC in batteries. It all "just works."

      However, that day is far in the future, and until that day, I intend to pay Apple to invent the ideas that will go into the free OS of 2015.

    2. Re:Two points. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What Apple basically did was getting a 20-year old idea (Unix operating system), improving it some (like this launchd) and then adding a cute, well, thoughtfully designed GUI on top of it."

      Obviously, your understanding on Mac OS X core architectures (graphics, video, sound and data) is either very limited or you are avoiding to mention them on purpose.

      There's _nothing_ today in _any_ operating system that compares to the Core technologies deployed not only in Tiger, but even on Panther.

    3. Re:Two points. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure you ment Edison's DC vs. Tesla's AC...

    4. Re:Two points. by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1

      Word. I momentarily forgot that Edison lost.

  233. Re:Maybe saying this right NOW is not so sensitve. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would be "ClearChannel," and it's funny you should mention them. The "list of songs to ban" came out a week after 9/11, and they suggested stations should avoid playing them. It includes titles like "Another One Bites the Dust," "Bodies," and "Sabotage." While whoever drew it up evidently did so after taking a big hit off the crack pipe ("Walk Like An Egyptian?" WTF?!,) it was not a ban on anti-war music.

    Here's the thread that /. had on it at the time: http://slashdot.org/articles/01/09/18/1228210.shtm l

  234. And what do those screenshots tell us anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    And what do those screenshots tell us anyway

    Do you see the antivirus icon in the system tray? For a new OS, whose development emphasizes stability and security, it's a dead giveaway about what they think about the system. Yeah, yeah, the guy might have installed it himself, but why should it be the first thing you install in the first place? You should start using the bloody thing, you know, downloading cool programs from iNet, play with eye candy. Instead: got the PC - board up the windows :) and live in fear and doubt that your PC is safe.
  235. OS X on Celeron by jdfox · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yeah, I've got a 333 Celeron with 128 MB too, and you wouldn't believe the trouble I had trying to get OS X to run on it!
    I gave up in the end.

  236. Don't confuse 'professional' with 'ugly' by master_p · · Score: 1

    XP has 100% professional look. The classic theme just sucks; it's way too ugly. I am one of many that I know that prefer the look of XP.

    And the biggest window controls are not a problem; in a display of 1200x1024 (standard display for 17" TFT), they take a few pixels more than the classic theme; it's hardly a problem.

    1. Re:Don't confuse 'professional' with 'ugly' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not professional at all, it's very poor. It might be okay for people at home, but at work I think most would have switched to "Classic".
      The minimize/max/close buttons are not even aligned properly.

  237. I smell grumpiness... by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

    I don't quite get your beef: are you upset that Apple made the Dock the way they did, or are you confusing Exposé with the Dock? Which is the task-switching you find better: the old System 7-Mac OS 9 way of showing the program icon in the corner, the NextStep way or (shudder!) the Windows Taskbar way? Or do you miss having Alt-Tab? In other words, you've never used control-tab?

    Your writing is a little confusing, but it seems to me that you've little experience in the differences between Jaguar and Panther, or that you've ever done more than a little futzing around with a Mac that was on display at a computer store. If that is not the case, then please clarify.

    1. Re:I smell grumpiness... by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Yes, grumpiness is an appropriate response to bad products from people who've done better in the past.

      are you upset that Apple made the Dock the way they did,

      I think I was pretty clear there.

      or are you confusing Exposé with the Dock?

      Of course not. Expose isn't the Dock, but it and Dock are both task-switching UIs, and Expose seems good because the only other official method is the horrible Dock. If OS X had come with a decent task-switcher from the beginning, Expose wouldn't seem have attracted much attention when it was eventually released.

      Which is the task-switching you find better:

      OS 9 with a combination of cycle-keys and pulldown menu is the best. (Some Linux desktops have that system too)
      Windows2k is next.
      NextStep is quite bad, but I can barely remember the feel of it.
      The OS X dock is worse than any of them.

      If that is not the case, then please clarify.

      Here are some famous HCI buzzwords:
      Muscle Memory, Fitt's Law, discoverability, responsiveness, consistent metaphor, scrubbing.


      Each of those is a well-documented design issue for which OS 9 was praised, but which OS X did as bad as Windows, or sometimes even worse. Any of those you don't know about, google should be able to explain.

      Hey Mac users: raise your hand if you've tried to reproduce the effect of the OS 9 Apple Menu by dragging a folder with links to your programs into the Dock. Now raise your other hand if you enjoy manually updating it when installing another program. Raise your foot if you like hovering the mouse for 6/10th of a second waiting for that menu to open.

      The Dock is just a big advertisement for the new graphics pipeline in OS X. They got the ability to stretch window contents into funny shapes, and wanted to see that effect more often.

    2. Re:I smell grumpiness... by CapnGib · · Score: 1

      I must chime in here with regard to your hatred for task switching in OS X. The dock is probably the most polarizing component of OS X. Some love it, others hate it, fortunately you can hide it, resize it, enable/disable magnification and move it to the side of the screen if you want. Personally, I keep it hidden, auto-sized and disable magnification.

      But, just like windows, you can quickly switch tasks with cmd-tab. Expose is a truly amazing way to find the specific window you are looking for, in a fast visual manner. MS tried something visual with the powertoy alt-tab thing, but it was pretty horrid.

      I genuinely prefer the dock to the WinXP taskbar for both task management and application launching. The XP taskbar, shows tiny icons with descriptive text which you must read. Unless I keep the taskbar 2 rows high the text gets truncated once 6 apps are open, so now my IE tasks are all indistinguishable. The dock is visual and can be a little faster to use for me. Plus it saves space by combining the quick launch icons with the running task icons. On my xp machine the taskbar takes up as much screen as my os x dock and is less intuitive to use.

      Of course cmd-tab (or alt-tab) is the fastest app-switcher. Here again the mac way is more efficient for me. Under WinXP, I have 5 explorer windows and 5 ie windows plus some other apps running, thats around 15 things to alt-tab through, half of which are visually identical, so I need to read the title of each to find my window... it works, but not as efficient. In os x, all the finder windows and ie windows are grouped together when I cmd-tab, so I only have 3-5 choices, all visual=fast. Now I can cmd-~ (which is right next to tab on the keyboard for efficiency) to visually pop through my 5 open finder windows. Faster, more efficient, more elegant.

      For launching applications I only slightly prefer OS X with the dock and applications folder (which i keep on the dock for quick access) to the start menu + quick launch on WinXP. Application installers tend to wreak havoc on the start menu, making it even more of an efficiency nightmare to navigate (again lots of reading since all the folder icons look the same). At least xp does try to make life a little easier by wrangling your most frequently used programs to the base of the start menu. The os x dock can get crowded (making the icons small) if you put too much stuff there, I keep it for my most frequently used apps. The XP quicklaunch bar on the other hand has tiny icons and pretty much sucks compared to the dock, but its still the way I prefer to open my 5 most frequently used apps on windows. But, combine the dock with the wonderful and free quicksilver on os X and you've got a best in class app launching setup.

      The systray is just plain garbage. And I can't figure out which branding is more annoying: the mac i____ or the windows My_____ and Windows______.

      I have to use an xp pc at work. When I get home and sit down at the computer to browse the web, check email, run quicken etc.. I want to get things done efficiently and with as little discomfort as possible. It took like 10 trips to the apple store for me to finally be convinced that os x was worth the extra $500 it cost to get a powerbook over a similar dell.

      Spyware-/Adware-/Virus-free since 2003!

      --
      Beauty is truly in the eye of the tiger
  238. unfinished WinFS...anyone selling a new Dos? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url= /library/en-us/dnlong/html/storyboardstory.asp

    looks like M$ is having difficulty copying ext3 in time for the scheduled delayed release of bighorn

  239. aeronautic ground avoidance exception (AGAE): by zardor · · Score: 1

    Regarding your term:
    "Plane crash" could be "aeronautic ground avoidance exception (AGAE)"

    The correct definitions are actually:

    Controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) - An event where an aircraft collided with obstacles, objects or terrain during powered, controlled flight with little or no awareness on the part of the pilot of the impending impact.

    Managed flight into terrain (MFIT) - An event where an aircraft collided with obstacles, objects or terrain while being flown under limited control or reduced performance, with insufficient height/performance to reach a designated landing area.

    Uncontrolled flight into terrain (UFIT) - An event where an aircraft collided with obstacles, objects or terrain after control of the aircraft was lost in-flight (includes cases where the pilot became incapacitated) but the aircraft structure did not change prior to impact.

    (!)

    --
    -- We don't understand software, and sometimes we don't understand hardware, but we can *see* the blinking lights
    1. Re:aeronautic ground avoidance exception (AGAE): by vacuum_tuber · · Score: 1

      Yes, well, ah, the point was humor, including unpronounceable abbreviations, not to use a few existing terms. The accepted terms you quote are almost humorous and would server, but news announcers might actually be able to pronounce the acronyms.

      There's another class of such terms where the acronym is silly or satiric. One I came up with for a satire of some corporate documentation many years ago come to mind:

      Peripheral Inertially Navigated Halo-Effect Administrative Device (PINHEAD). This allowed me to make reference to management PINHEADs.
      --
      Look at the bright side: there's always seppuku.
    2. Re:aeronautic ground avoidance exception (AGAE): by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uncontrolled flight into terrain (UFIT) - An event where an aircraft collided with obstacles, objects or terrain after control of the aircraft was lost in-flight (includes cases where the pilot became incapacitated) but the aircraft structure did not change prior to impact.

      What do they call it when the aircraft structure did change prior to impact?

  240. Greedy bastard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    UI is artless and amature. Better work is seen on DeviantArt.com

    Amateur or immature?

    You can't have both!

  241. choo-choo by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

    if a train leaves New York at 10:17 EST, carrying 10,000 copies of Longhorn, and traveling at 120mph, and another train leaves Los Angeles, carrying 12,000 copies of Longhorn SP1, traveling East at 97mph, at what time to the two trains collide and how many copies of SP1 actually survive the wreck? How many copies of Longhorn survive the wreck? Extra Credit: Factor the averages of the number of copies of software on both trains, including the purchase price and marketing cost, and contrive the net loss to be incurred by the average consumer. Grammar counts.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
  242. Re: lowmem by radu124 · · Score: 1

    try XP+Office 2000 on 64MB, 233MHz Pentium MMX after you've done trimming services themes and skins, you can still play an mp3 in background. really

  243. Re: x performance by radu124 · · Score: 1

    not really, I think it's the X server, Except for the direct rendering, which finally repaired some problems the entire concept sux. Any function call to X that must return a result requires two task switches.

    This can be overcome by implementing xlib directly over the driver, skipping the client-server communication. I think athene/snap does this and they claim to have some improvement. I tried something but it didn't have real drivers for the videocard.

  244. That's not longhorn's nearly final GUI. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You say that the interface is amaturish and crappy, but the interface is only a representation of the minimum aero. Aero, the new theming/awesome engine hasn't been implemented and afaik it will be implemented in beta 2 (october-november 2005)

  245. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  246. Changing the look is not the same as changing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Changing the look of an application interface is not the same as changing a feature of the application itself. Windows programmers seem to be in love with changing the look rather than chaning the application. I guess it may be because it's too difficult to do anything useful with the core since its far too bloated and far too buggy to worry about.

  247. NSToolbar optional? (MOD PARENT UP) by argent · · Score: 1

    And you can always edit NIBs to turn it off in applications that do.

    Oh, thank god.

  248. Rhetorical question. by argent · · Score: 1

    Why did it take a couple of ACs to answer this, instead of the guy who's actually working at Apple?

    1. Re:Rhetorical question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Look at the guy's posts. He's a troll. He only responds to the most inflammatory stuff, and ignores factual replies that try to correct him.

      Besides, real Apple employees are far to afraid of being fired to ever post non-AC about work related stuff.

  249. all is not lost, by sonictheboom · · Score: 1

    it still has Paint!

  250. the truth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The truth sometimes hurts, doesn't it.

  251. Re:The Irony: A Historical Perspective... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    So IBM and Microsoft entered into a deal that essentially saw IBM make money by selling the hardware, while Microsoft made money by selling IBM copies of their OS.

    No, IBM owned their copy called IBM-DOS, they still sell it. Microsoft retained the rights to MS-DOS and was allowed to license it to third parties.

    Admittedly developing Longhorn must be a massive undertaking, however so was MS-DOS 1.0 back in 1980.
    They bought QDOS and slapped their name on it. There was no major development required.

    If your going to repeat history, get it right.

  252. Re:Maybe saying this right NOW is not so sensitve. by KlomDark · · Score: 1

    Oh Shut The Fuck Up you whining bitch.

  253. Do us all a favor... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    md5sum the binaries in the \windows folder and the binaries in the same folder under WinXP (recursive).

    Diff the results and post them here.

    I'm betting the core files havent't changed much.
    Curious minds want to know.

  254. The Shadowy world of Interface design by guet · · Score: 1

    I don't think you have this right here - ALL Aqua apps will have the new NSToolbar look (if they use a Toolbar). In fact this at least makes toolbars consistent between metal and aqua windows, so that's a plus - both have toolbars that extend the window title-bar : )

    The thing that bugs me personally are those buttons, which are no better that the previous ones (which could be scaled anyway) and are fact much uglier IMHO - they remind me of Entourage. They are also out of style with all the other apps (including Apple ones).

    Apple really should hire someone to look after the HIG again and try to be consistent, otherwise they *will* end up with every app pulling the GUI in 10 different directions like Windows. Especially with loads of new developers coming to the platform from other ones - the rules need to be stricter and Apple needs to follow them. Changing styles for a new version of the operating system is good (despite the inevitable whining), but having 5 different styles of window within a system with no consistency is not.

    1. Re:The Shadowy world of Interface design by argent · · Score: 1

      In fact this at least makes toolbars consistent between metal and aqua windows, so that's a plus

      It makes the title bar inconsistent between Aqua windows with toolbars and Aqua windows without toolbars.

      And it doesn't make the toolbar really consistent with Metal, because Metal windows don't have "a toolbar that extends the title bar" - that is, there's nothing in the metal look that binds the title bar specifically to the toolbar. Rather, they have "a title bar that extends to the entire textured surface of the window".

    2. Re:The Shadowy world of Interface design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ALL Aqua apps will have the new NSToolbar look

      No they won't. The "no divider" look, which unifies the titlebar and the toolbar is optional. And not all apps use it. Preview and other apps in /Application still have the old look, even though they too are using NSToolbar.

      To get the new look, you have to turn the "no divider" option on in InterfaceBuidler (it's off by default).

    3. Re:The Shadowy world of Interface design by guet · · Score: 1

      oh thanks, didn't know that. I was just going by the screenshots...

  255. Tastless humor by welshmnt · · Score: 1

    Wot? Just like there were no (princess) Diana jokes, Piper Alpha jokes (exploding oil platform), PanAm 103 jokes?
    Different country, mabye? Different way of dealing with trauma (own or others)? Humor saved my mind after my grandparents died, including some very distastfull and hillarious remarks.
    Ho hum, I guess different people deal with their empathy differently. (Shock horror)
    Take care
    Jo

  256. Gore by nexus987 · · Score: 1

    As I understand it, Al Gore actually WAS responsible for government grant money, which was used to fund early research that led to the creation of the internet. He never claimed that he "invented" the internet. I'm pretty sure his actual words were twisted by Republican spinsters...

  257. Re:It's all in the configuration really by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 1

    So, if you tweak the hell out of XP, it runs in less memory than a bone stock, out-of-the-box Linux distro that's 2 years newer.

    Wow. That has the makings of a great Microsoft-funded study......

    --
    "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
  258. Cool! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have a Mac OS X theme for Windows XP now!

  259. Attention mods: by Dwonis · · Score: 1

    I'm not trolling. All my desktop machines are running Debian, just not Debian woody.

  260. Super Mario Land? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've never heard (or seen) of the teletubbies, have ya?

    XP's new menus, themes, GUI enhancements and otherwise are TOTAL CRAP. It makes me wish for Win 3.11 or OS/2 again.

    Switch it back to classic everything and you've regained a useful OS. I can't even imagine it having it otherwise.

    I don't know what's wrong with people these days (not just win users), all they seem to care about is eye candy (and very ugly and unusable eye candy, that is).

  261. I wonder who's confused here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, but the XP styles are just ugly, seem to be made for retards, is super slow, gets in the way, ... You couldn't even get me to touch your PC setup that way (unless you're really rich).

    Classic look is the only way it's useable.

  262. ASOTV is a troll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... and not a very smart one. It's fairly obvious by reading his posts that he's all bluster and no substance and is NOT an Apple employee.

    No doubt he thinks he's being clever by doing this and duping moderators into moderating his drivel up as +Insightful. Moderators: Do Your Homework before modding up idiotic posers like As Seen On TV--he's not laughing with you, he's lauging *at* you (same goes for you Mac fanboys ;).

  263. Re:Wow! Longhorn will do what Linux distros do now by zorander · · Score: 1

    KDE wasn't innovating either. In fact, document previews are sufficiently peripheral and obvious that they're not innovations at all. Apple's implementation is especially nice since it allows the application to define custom icons per document (i.e. CPU time isn' being wasted rendering every time the file browser hits it). Microsoft isn't passing this off as innovation, they're just happening to add a feature that already existed elsewhere. It's not a crime. Microsoft isn't always 'wrong'.

  264. hmmm better comments on longhorn posted here... by The1Genius · · Score: 1
    --
    The1Genius - Littera Scripta Manet
  265. Re:It's all in the configuration really by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    I always do what you described, and I didn't say that WinXP doesn't run with more or less tolerable speed on 128Mb. I said that WinXP+OfficeXp don't.

  266. Re:Wow! Longhorn will do what Linux distros do now by xtracto · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but as you just wrote I will not count that as an Impressive feature... while Mr. Gates thinks that:

    Longhorn's icons will be particularly impressive. Because they are based on raster graphics technology and not bitmaps, they scale correctly to any resolution. They also display in a special thumbnail mode that graphically shows the contents of each file.


    That can be realized RingTFA...

    --
    Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
  267. Overstated by abb3w · · Score: 1
    You're probably going to hate me for saying this, but IT employees contribute absolutely nothing to an organization. They produce nothing, they transport nothing, they collect nothing. They're an expense. One we hope to render completely obsolete.

    So is the janitor. All but the smallest businesses still need one, either on staff or as a service on contract. And if he happens to be a competent handyman, he may cover your basic electrical and plumbing needs as well.

    Moreover, speaking as an IT employee, I feel I do contribute something a little more than a tech-janitor. Users need to learn how to use their systems... and sometimes, how to learn to do something new. Furthermore, sometimes they'll have trouble describing what the new task is, making automated searches of help files unhelpful... even leaving aside the need to learn how to craft a well-tailored search. A good IT staffer also serves as an internal educational resource, that can provide as-needed training as users discover new needs. Training users who often don't fully understand what their training needs are is an AI-complete problem, and I wish you luck in solving it.

    Of course, training produces nothing, transports nothing, and collects nothing for the organization either....

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.