Slashdot Mirror


Windows Monoculture Myopia Revisited

round stic writes "eWeek magazine has an interesting look at the effects of the Windows monoculture on IT budgets, even as everyone agrees on the severity of the inherent security risks. The article contains interviews with Dan Geer and others who warned about the risks of the Windows monopoly three years ago. The article coincides with a piece in the Observer that suggests Vista is the end of the Microsoft monolith because of how complex the operating system has become."

2 of 319 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Please read the Observer article before comment by Bobby+Orr · · Score: 5, Informative
    TFA is a rant. A sentence like "The Vista saga has two interesting lessons for the computer business." would lead you to believe the author intends to take an objective look at some sort of a case study. However, pay attention to other verbiage within TFA. This is not an objective, fair, reasoned attempt to learn any lesson. It is a rant:
    • ...marketed to people in poor countries in a futile attempt...
    • Security vulnerabilities come free with all versions
    • There will be a predictable (and expensive) PR campaign ... But in Redmond ...
    • How can hackers, scattered across the globe, working for no pay, linked only by the net and shared values, apparently outperform the smartest software company on the planet?
    • And here's where the delicious ironies begin.
  2. Re:Top Windows writer abandons Microsoft by Aqualung812 · · Score: 4, Informative
    If you were really asking the question "WHAT THE FUCK IT IS IN THE FREAKING STICKER UNDER THE NOTEBOOK", I have an answer: It is for the CD that came with the laptop, or the OS image that is on a seperate partition. If she lost the disc that came with it, or you repartitioned it and blew away the other image then you do not have the same software that the sticker was ment for.

    By using your custom "XP Home / XP Pro" CD (I have never heard of a MS printed disc that does that), you are using a different disrtobution of XP than the one that came with the laptop. While not as drastic, it would be like trying to fix a Red Hat install with your Ubuntu disc.

    Windows does just work if you treat it like a Mac. Only use signed drivers, use the OS disc that came from the factory, etc and it works. Try to take it outside of that protected area and you risk running into problems like this. Some people are very familar with XP and tweak it to do amazing things just as some take a Linux distro and customize it, although the latter has far more room to customize and far more places that you can screw up if you don't know what you are doing.

    --
    Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.