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Linux Foundation Calls for 'Respect for Microsoft'

kripkenstein writes "Jim Zemlin (executive director for the Linux Foundation) gave a talk at LinuxWorld saying that the open source community should stop poking fun at Microsoft. From the VNU article: 'Open source vendors have to recognize that Windows is here to stay and that together with Microsoft it will form a duopoly in the market for operating systems. This also requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it. "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"

486 comments

  1. I thought OS X Linux by LokiSnake · · Score: 2, Informative

    Duopoly? Microsoft and Linux? I thought OSX has more market share than Linux does. Well, okay, at least in the desktop market.

  2. Uh-huh. by brennanw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So he's essentially saying I should respect Microsoft for thinking up all the dirty tricks it used to get it's monopoly in the first place. ... I am not convinced.

    --
    Eviscerati.Org: All Hail the Eviscerati
    1. Re:Uh-huh. by mister_woods · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why should I have any respect for an organisation that's been convicted of anti-competitive practices on 2 continents? Microsoft is a bunch of crooks selling a third-rate products. Respect has to earned, not expected.

    2. Re:Uh-huh. by FyRE666 · · Score: 1

      "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"

      Yeah, and we should also give respect to the mafia for fending off the competition with their protection rackets. Let's also give respect to George Bush for fending off that nasty constitution...

    3. Re:Uh-huh. by donpeyote · · Score: 2, Insightful

      really why dont everyone stops this nonsense about microsoft, they are good and they know what they are doing. Period. Everything else is just fundamentalism.

      --
      sorry for eventual bad english, not my mother language
    4. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Maybe you can start by asking yourself who allows a business to develop into a monopoly at first place, you might get some clues (hint: both US/EU do). That both US/EU waited for MS to become a monopoly shoudl tell you something.

    5. Re:Uh-huh. by Nikker · · Score: 1

      Looks like Billy boy has gotten someone elses pants ;)

      I think I'll wait until they ... ahem wait for it.... actually do something to imress me!

      That is all..

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
    6. Re:Uh-huh. by an.echte.trilingue · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because the PHBs do. You don't have to advocate it, just accept it and be willing to work with it when necessary. Then, when the time comes to advocate something else to your PHB, s/he will listen to you.

      I got my boss to switch to open source for a lot of things that way.

      --
      weirdest thing I ever saw: scientology advertising on slashdot.
    7. Re:Uh-huh. by aquabat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Respect has to earned, not expected. They've earned my respect. I respect them in the same way that I'd respect a rabid cougar. I stay as far away from them as I can, and when I have to be around them, I'm very, very careful.
      --
      A republic cannot succeed till it contains a certain body of men imbued with the principles of justice and honour.
    8. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, but you should respect their ability to ruthlessly compete - and plan to counter it. Otherwise you'll have the same fate as ODF is currently going for.

    9. Re:Uh-huh. by stevey · · Score: 1

      I'm not convinced either, but at the same time I find references to "Micro$t" et all to be childish and more harmful than useful.

      They project the impression that free software users/developers/supporters support something for personality reasons rather than clear technical superiority.

    10. Re:Uh-huh. by Inverted+Intellect · · Score: 1

      Good as in the opposite of evil, or as in good at something?

      I would neither call that particular corporate entity very moral, nor would I call its primary products very good on the whole. The former sentiment is backed by repeated anti-competetive behavior and self-serving lies, the latter is frequently shown by the existence of superior products on the market.

      How are my views fundamentalist, might I ask?

      Ok, yes, they do know what they are doing, and they're very good at selling their products. I must concede that. But it does not change my view of the company as a whole.

    11. Re:Uh-huh. by neo8750 · · Score: 1

      I could be wrong but from my following of the whole matter over the years MS was getting in trouble early on for their practices the legal system just took so long to catch up that their foothold as a monopoly was well set in stone by then. heck look at the IE thing was already shipped to thousands upon thousands before the government stepped in and went "hey stop that! that is bad!" I'm sorry but if is considered bad play and its been out o the market for long enough there is no stopping it and, fining the company who did it doesn't stop it either because that doesn't destroy the monopoly that was already made.

    12. Re:Uh-huh. by Cathbard · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Isn't this like a christian saying we should respect the devil because he's powerful and not going away? Respect is earned and M$ haven't earned it.

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    13. Re:Uh-huh. by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why should I have any respect for an organisation that's been convicted of anti-competitive practices on 2 continents? Microsoft is a bunch of crooks selling a third-rate products. Respect has to earned, not expected.

      That is fine, but when you're trying to get me (as a customer or just as an interested third party) to buy into your non-Microsoft solution (either for business or home) and you tell me that Microsoft are a "bunch of crooks selling a third-rate products" then you've immediately lost, do not pass go and do not collect £200. However correct that may be.

      You may not like Microsoft, you may not respect them - but in advocacy ridiculing a competitor is not a way to encourage people (and those in companies that make the key decisions) to change. Sell them on what Linux can do for them, not how much Microsoft sucks.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    14. Re:Uh-huh. by e4g4 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In truth, the best course is to have nothing to do with Microsoft or its products and get on with life. I think this is the best example of "Easier said than done" I've seen on slashdot in years. I think I'd equate it to: "Don't like nitrogen? Well - just don't breathe it in." :P
      --
      The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources. - Albert Einstein
    15. Re:Uh-huh. by ricegf · · Score: 1

      | they are good

      Are they good to their customers? Well, they give them what they pay for."

      Not. I paid good money for my daughter's new full copy of XP, and they won't even allow her the updates and support she was promised (except for that most critical^H^H^H desperate of all updates, IE7, which she ignores thanks to Firefox). And my wife's new laptop included a copy of XP Home, which is so bad it's rarely used (thank Mark for Ubuntu!).

      They are good at pressuring PC vendors to install only their products. They are good at supporting 3rd party developers to ensure many new applications are Windows only.

      But giving customers what they want? Well, not this customer!

      the best course is to have nothing to do with Microsoft or its products and get on with life

      Well, I do that, sure. But my employer insists on Windows because of "corporate policy", and my kids for the games. But one day... one day...

    16. Re:Uh-huh. by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      Right. Because as we all know, MS certainly lost a lot of marketshare due to their many FUD campaigns.

      Claiming that FUD causes you to lose the persuasion is bs.

      Or perhaps you were claiming that FUD doesn't work with you. Ok, I can't argue with that. But, you are not the general population of potential users/customers. Clearly, FUD at least doesn't hurt in the vast majority of cases.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    17. Re:Uh-huh. by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1

      Right. Because as we all know, MS certainly lost a lot of marketshare due to their many FUD campaigns.

      I get your point, although to be fair Microsoft's FUD is generally a little bit slicker than the "Micky$oft Windoze suxx!" type posts that you see with general Google searches. I'm sure there are companies out there that do a good job of debunking their claims - it's just a shame they tend to get lost in the noise.

      Or perhaps you were claiming that FUD doesn't work with you. Ok, I can't argue with that. But, you are not the general population of potential users/customers. Clearly, FUD at least doesn't hurt in the vast majority of cases.

      True, I think a lot of it comes down to how you market that FUD.

      Microsoft (and a good many other companies) are very good at marketing their product and doing "comparisons" with others to get their point across - unfortunately the Linux community aren't so good at that (which is fair, it's not their day job) and it tends to come across a bit childish and namecalling.

      Not related to you at all but creative spellings of companies is one that always gets my goat. I see no reason to call it "Linsux" in the same way I see no reason to call it "Windoze" or "Micro$oft".

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    18. Re:Uh-huh. by DogDude · · Score: 1

      No, he's saying that the OSS zealots should stop acting like whiny children. Some of the stuff I read from the OSS camp is embarrassingly juvenile to such an extent that it's a real turn off. I don't care if somebody has an OSS app that spits gold out of my CD Rom drive, I'm not working with some jerk who writes stuff like "M$".

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    19. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Truth. Respect doesn't mean you like or approve of them, it means that you recognize reality: that MS is a huge presence in the market, and that sneering at them won't make them go away.

    20. Re:Uh-huh. by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      really why dont everyone stops this nonsense about microsoft, they are good and they know what they are doing. Period. Everything else is just fundamentalism. They're good at making money and they know what they are doing in that regard. The same is not true however for the design of their products. Their software and technologies are designed for generating maximum profit. Just that and nothing else. If you want innovation, look somewhere else.
      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    21. Re:Uh-huh. by westlake · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So he's essentially saying I should respect Microsoft for thinking up all the dirty tricks it used to get it's monopoly in the first place. ... I am not convinced.

      Apple chose a closed hardware and software platform that sells at a fixed price through a limited number of outlets. At any given moment, there will be a half dozen or so Macs to choose from on the market, and, if none of them quite fits your needs, well, tough luck. Microsoft liked the look of the IBM PC's modular design, and negotiated a deal that allowed it to license its OS to all comers. Again, at any given moment, there will hundreds if not thousands of PCs and PC-based devices available from seemingly as many vendors. It doesn't matter what your price-point is, how obscure or fantastic your needs are or how mundane. The My-First-PC for your kid? Point-of-sale in the mini-mart? Satellite Internet for the commercial trucker in the Arctic? The mil-standard armored laptop for duty in Iraq? The maxed-out gamer's machine at $5000. No problem. Someone will have an off-the-shelf Windows solution.

      Of course Linux can do many of these things - perhaps all of these things. But Microsoft was there twenty-five years ago, thirty years ago. Microsoft defines the PC for a billion users who are not and never have been Geeks.

    22. Re:Uh-huh. by bladesjester · · Score: 1

      You make a sane argument (and one that I've made for a long time).

      So tell me, what the heck are you doing *here*? =]

      --
      Everything I need to know I learned by killing smart people and eating their brains.
    23. Re:Uh-huh. by ehrichweiss · · Score: 1

      "and when I have to be around them, I'm very, very careful."

      Sounds like you've already tried out Vista then, eh?

      --
      0x09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
    24. Re:Uh-huh. by e2d2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think he means you should respect it the same way you respect a weapon. Don't point the barrel at your foot and shoot. Underestimating MS seems to be the soup de jour at the Linux community diner. You don't see the kernel devs eating though, why? Because they respect MS.

      I respect the power of physics when I walk down the stairs. It doesn't make me an uncle tom.

      The Linux community needs a "come to jesus" meeting, where we recognize the strength of worthy adversaries and study their moves, not dismiss them as unworthy of study. They most certainly are worthy of respect and study! They dominate the market! Dismiss that at your own demise.

    25. Re:Uh-huh. by Count_Froggy · · Score: 1

      ...christian saying we should respect the devil... When you create your own (not pre-existing) near-god-like figure in your religion, yes, the devil deserves your respect. That doesn't mean you have to agree with him. [There is no 'devil' in Judaism, the character was borrowed from a merging of the greek/roman concept of Hades and the Zoroastrian God of Darkness - both common religions at the time of the rise of Christianity.]

      Respect is earned and M$ haven't earned it. Respect can be 'earned' through other factors besides 'I want to be like you.'. Fear can be a reason to respect another. I respect poisonous snakes and try to stay away from them, as an example - don't you?
      --
      If I am not for myself, then who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? If not now, when?
    26. Re:Uh-huh. by Codifex+Maximus · · Score: 1

      > Why should I have any respect for an organisation that's been convicted of anti-competitive practices on 2 continents? Microsoft
      >is a bunch of crooks selling a third-rate products. Respect has to earned, not expected.

      I'm glad I read the comments before posting! Otherwise, I would have duplicated Mister_Woods post.

      --
      Codifex Maximus ~ In search of... a shorter sig.
    27. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if that rabid cougar had convicted of anti-competitive practices on 2 continents?

    28. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their software and technologies are designed for generating maximum profit. Just that and nothing else. If you want innovation, look somewhere else. WOW, I bet all mega corporations will give up profit just on "principle" of innovating. Nobody in any industry gives a fuck about innovation. They only do (sometimes) if theres a chance to make money off of it. If there *is* a freebie out there there is a >99% chance that its from a University/Science Lab/etc. You have no clue of how large public companies work.
      Wake up.

    29. Re:Uh-huh. by Cathbard · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, that sort of respect is indeed the only type that M$ have earned - acknowledgement that they are aggressive, poisonous vipers and should be treated as such. That isn't the type of respect that is being asked for here.

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    30. Re:Uh-huh. by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Everytime anything goes wrong just blame windows. Say something like "I had to reboot the windows server and it would not come up for a while, just like the time we rebooted your desktop and it would not come up remember".

      Soon the PHB will get the message that the answer is not windows, the problem is windows.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    31. Re:Uh-huh. by killjoe · · Score: 1

      So sad about slashdot. Now that all the geeks are left it's turned into an anti GPL pro microsoft web site.

      Where is the next slashdot? Not reddit or digg, where did all the slashdotters go.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    32. Re:Uh-huh. by JohnFluxx · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually there was a leaked report from Microsoft from their marketting department that showed that customers were not impressed by their FUD, and that it actually encouraged people to take Linux seriously. It was why they stepped down the Get The Facts Campaign.

    33. Re:Uh-huh. by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      So complaining about, for example, this farce with OOXML is just fundamentalism? You live in a strange world.

    34. Re:Uh-huh. by penix1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The thing nobody noticed with that sentence you quoted (even you missed it) is that it states two different things, neither have anything to do with each other...

      "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. "Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"

      Neither marketing nor "fending off competition" has a thing to do with Windows. Windows the product sucks. Microsoft the corporation has used illegal means to gain their dominance. Is Zemlin advocating that the FOSS community resort to illegal means to become this duopoly? Interesting point of view....

      --
      This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
    35. Re:Uh-huh. by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      I know it's open source etc, but I don't think the actual hacker comes round and works with you...

    36. Re:Uh-huh. by T23M · · Score: 1

      Seems to me that the /. groupthink still flourishes.

    37. Re:Uh-huh. by kdemetter · · Score: 1

      Maybe you can start by asking yourself who allows a business to develop into a monopoly at first place, you might get some clues (hint: both US/EU do). That both US/EU waited for MS to become a monopoly shoudl tell you something. You have an excellent point there , however , neither the US nor the EU has earned my respect either .

      Nonthing deserves respect just because it has power .
    38. Re:Uh-huh. by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      There are strongly customer oriented companies out there (Apple and Nintendo spring to mind), which are not afraid taking the risk of losing quite a lot of customers by innovation. Both have failed from time to time, but were overwhelmingly successful at other times, and their fan base is the most loyal you can find because they regularly bring out "cool" and 100% usable products.

      Microsoft, on the other hand, is a totally risk averse company that just tries to keep the train going, disregarding any opportunity to reshuffle the market by means of technological breakthrough. That's why many of us say Microsoft is already "dead" and a thing of the past. Their lock-in infrastructure still keeps a majority of businesses running, they still have enough market capitalization to thrive for years without any income, but outside of their core market (Office/Outlook/Exchange) they don't stand a chance anymore. And even at their core business they are seriously threatened by convenient cross-platform technologies.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    39. Re:Uh-huh. by Torvaun · · Score: 3, Informative

      Being a monopoly isn't illegal. Sustaining that monopoly through anticompetitive practices is. After all, anytime someone is innovative and markets it, they have a monopoly. They are the only people who make widget x. It's not until they start trying to keep everyone else from making widget x knockoffs that they're breaking the law. Also, if widget y gains a large enough share of the market, widget x is now free to be as anticompetitive as they want.

      --
      I see your informative link, and raise you a pithy comment.
    40. Re:Uh-huh. by darkpixel2k · · Score: 2, Funny

      it doesn't stop it either because that doesn't destroy the monopoly that was already made.

      Yeah. Sounds familiar. Almost like another monopoly...

      --
      There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    41. Re:Uh-huh. by tigerhawkvok · · Score: 1

      MS produces an OS that is stable for the most part (really, most of the issues stem from bad drivers), and like any computer system, if you take a bit of care in how you set it up it will serve you rather well. If you really do dislike it, ignore it, don't use it, and get on with your life. It is not really useful to despise MS and love Apple just because that's the "in" thing in the tech crowd (and, for the record, I despise Apple ... their X.0 products are essentially public betas that work worse than most Windows betas, and they let form impact function too often). These are just companies, after all. If nothing else, think of this: Microsoft deserves repsect for essentially supporting every device and every peice of hardware on the market, a feat which Apple doesn't even try to do and that Linux is spotty on. Whether or not all the drivers you get end up being WHQL signed or not, they do make the effort and there is an impressive list of device compliance.

      --
      Blog
    42. Re:Uh-huh. by ThePromenader · · Score: 1

      Microsoft owes its monopoly to a few words:

      Shipped. Pre-installed. To. Hook. First-time. Computer. Users.

      Thankfully the western world's "computer ignorance" age is coming to an end - which is why MS has set their sights on developing countries today.

      --

      No, no sig. Really.

      ThePromenader
    43. Re:Uh-huh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      respect: high or special regard

      So a very special low regard is also respect? Like, "I respect the drug dealers because they carry guns and I've heard they kill people."

    44. Re:Uh-huh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1
      I don't think ridicule means what you at least seem to think it means.

      WordNet® 3.0. Princeton University. ridicule
      noun
      1. language or behavior intended to mock or humiliate
      2. the act of deriding or treating with contempt
      I'm pretty sure that statements of fact (convicted of anti-competitive practices on 2 continents) aren't ridicule. Now while "bunch of crooks" is probably fairly well accepted it is perhaps inflammatory, while "third-rate products" is off course subjective and less quantifiable (though also probably fairly well accepted over the course of MS's lifetime).
    45. Re:Uh-huh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1
      What you present here is a form of ridicule. However the GP and P where not being so childish.

      So he's essentially saying I should respect Microsoft for thinking up all the dirty tricks it used to get it's monopoly in the first place. ... I am not convinced.
      and

      Why should I have any respect for an organisation that's been convicted of anti-competitive practices on 2 continents? Microsoft is a bunch of crooks selling a third-rate products. Respect has to earned, not expected.
    46. Re:Uh-huh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Surely you are not suggesting that *anyone* emulate illegal business behavior?

    47. Re:Uh-huh. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      This is a non-argument. Until they're a monopoly, you can't accuse them of being a monopoly. Look at the Hunt brothers, they tried to corner to silver market. They failed, went broke, and then were prosecuted for some of their illegal practices to add insult to injury.

      You can't convict someone for something they might become before they become it, especially if they become one legally. (Although I'm not aware of a single monopoly that got there legally, unless you count those that were established as monopolies via government fiat).

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    48. Re:Uh-huh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Well marketing isn't illegal :-) Dirty, maybe, but not illegal...

    49. Re:Uh-huh. by dhavleak · · Score: 1

      Everytime anything goes wrong just blame windows. Say something like "I had to reboot the windows server and it would not come up for a while, just like the time we rebooted your desktop and it would not come up remember".

      Soon the PHB will get the message that the answer is not windows, the problem is windows. I think this is the kind of ridicule TFA is referring to. You're actually suggesting that people blame windows 'Everytime anything goes wrong' - irrespective of whether it's windows fault or not. It's like crying wolf. If the linux community resorts to tactics like this it will eventually lose credibility, which would be a serious problem. Just the way you lost credibility when you posted this comment. I mean, you ended your post saying "the answer is not windows, the problem is windows" but in your post you say "blame windows no matter what the problem is".
    50. Re:Uh-huh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      "Consumers gave Microsoft its (questionable at the very least) monopoly"

      That isn't what they taught at MBA school. History seems to indicate MS was neither innovative nor cheap.

    51. Re:Uh-huh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      What does it mean to say its isn't useful to despise (anything) that is just a company? Does MS's convictions matter? Would it be PC to say, "Oh I don't despise MS, I just despise their long history of illegal behavior...but they are just a company, so I don't despise them."

    52. Re:Uh-huh. by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      Link? I'm interested. Maybe we should mail this report to Ballmer, and then he'd step down from the "umpty-fratz patents violated" campaign.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    53. Re:Uh-huh. by namekuseijin · · Score: 1

      stop that peyote consumption, man!

      --
      I don't feel like it...
    54. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither have you.

    55. Re:Uh-huh. by someone1234 · · Score: 1

      Oh sure. Why don't you just say, people who KNOW Microsoft are terrorists.

      --
      Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
    56. Re:Uh-huh. by TurboStar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Respect has to earned, not expected. I think you have that confused with trust. Trust is earned, respect must be given away and revoked as necessary.
    57. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Thankfully the western world's "computer ignorance" age is coming to an end"

      No it isn't.

    58. Re:Uh-huh. by Millenniumman · · Score: 1

      I don't care if somebody has an OSS app that spits gold out of my CD Rom drive, I'm not working with some jerk who writes stuff like "M$". I have to say, that whole gold out of the CDROM drive thing would be worth it even if they wrote it as "MGREEEDYEVILEVILMONEY$$$$$$$$MONEYSIGNEVILEVILMIC ROSOFTISEVELGOLINUXGNUPWNSWINDOWSHEHEHEHEHEHEHAHAH AHAHAHAHMICROSOFTISEVILGREEDY!!!!$$$$$$$$$DOLLARSI GNDOLLARSIGN".

      --
      Stupidity is like nuclear power, it can be used for good or evil. And you don't want to get any on you.
    59. Re:Uh-huh. by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      It was the Halloween Document 7: http://catb.org/esr/halloween/halloween7.html

    60. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How exactly was this insightful?

      I haven't used any Microsoft products in years. Don't use then at home, don't use them at work. Not really that hard.

    61. Re:Uh-huh. by Salgat · · Score: 1

      Agreed, I'm not going to respect M$ for marketing reasons. I appreciate engineering more than the best way to manipulate an ignorant user with claims of being "the best".

    62. Re:Uh-huh. by DogDude · · Score: 1

      So tell me, what the heck are you doing *here*? =]

      The same reason that people smoke... bad habit!

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    63. Re:Uh-huh. by AaronLawrence · · Score: 1

      Are they good at making software? Not as far as I can tell.

      This is exactly the blindness that is being talked about. Its obvious that Microsoft ARE good at some software; Office applications for example, where they lead the world by a wide margin having beaten many competitors including current free ones.

      They are also the only company willing to really put the effort into a desktop OS that general users want, including all the tedious things like backwards compatibility, phone support, and massive testing. They also created a competent server OS in Windows NT.

      Not EVERYTHING they do is good, and they do have problems, and they do nasty things I dislike a lot, but you need to see both the good and bad to compete with them properly.

      --
      For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert. - Arthur C. Clarke
    64. Re:Uh-huh. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Accepting it and being willing to work with it is not respect.

      I don't like Microsoft as a company. Most Microsoft products are an absolute pain to work with, and if asked to work with them, I will immediately ask if there's an alternative.

      If there isn't, I'll try my best not to bitch about it, and I'll work with what I have to. But that's not because I respect Microsoft, it's because I respect that I have to have a job, and sometimes that I even respect the decision management made, or had to make.

      As for getting people to switch, I generally do that by being an example. My college roommate constantly had to deal with Norton AntiVirus and Norton Firewall lagging him out of games, even though he didn't have a proper subscription. I had no such problems, and laughed at him when he did -- which was fine, he was laughing (and crying) himself. Eventually, he just gave up and had me install Kubuntu for him, so he didn't have to deal with it anymore.

      Of course, price never hurts. (And yes, TCO -- managers love it when, as a contractor, I say "I'll keep monitoring it for free as long as you leave me with access -- it takes less than a minute for me to install upgrades.")

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    65. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So a very special low regard is also respect? Like, "I respect the drug dealers because they carry guns and I've heard they kill people." Actually it's more like if you meet a gun carrying murderer drug dealer on the street, don't ridicule and disrespect him. Doing so won't make him any better, and may end up hurting you or your cause.
    66. Re:Uh-huh. by pravuil · · Score: 1

      Yes, but they are a business. Linux is a business too. Linux has to fight to get a fair share of the market. When a company is trying to defend their share of the market from an abstract source, they tend to do some pretty stupid things to keep their dominance. Hopefully, both sides understand that they are competitors and competition can create some bad things to happen for both sides not to mention some good things as well. It's part of the game but it doesn't have to result in a violent fiasco forcing business after business into bankruptcy. If both Microsoft and Linux can accept this then it would be like the whites accepting desegregation in the 1950's. It's not easy but it needs to be done for the right reasons.

    67. Re:Uh-huh. by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      The examples in the summary are moronic. There are things Windows does better than other OSes. For instance, it has much finer-grained file/resource permissions, and it's been designed to support centralized control (using domains and Active Directory) for corporations to take advantage of.

    68. Re:Uh-huh. by 0ld_d0g · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Apple, um, customer oriented? I suppose they abandoned the profit making model most companies go for then...
      I cannot refute that they do make popular products that people buy in large numbers, but, your reasoning behind why they do it is totally naive. They too like MS want to lock-in people in their business model. Since they don't have deep enough pockets, they probably couldn't function as MS does. Steve Jobs is the most ruthless businessman out there, if you don't think so as any Apple Manager.

      Heres a few tidbits to think about
      > iphone = lock-in = Buy expensive apps from Apple/ATT. (even though the iPhone is cracked now, selling 3rd party apps is illegal - they released the details about web apps (over their crappy non-3g-conection) at the last moment even though they knew it months ago)
      > Lying about performance figures. Apple has consistently lied about PowerPC performance figures (http://lowendmac.com/hodges/06/0817.html)
      > Lying about Product Features. (http://blogs.business2.com/apple/2007/05/behind_t he_appl.html)
      > Apple routinely marks up retail prices of *all* their hardware products to maximize profit. Often much much higher than products with similar components (Note: They do *not* use any higher quality components (yes, anyone can get that silvery apple finish, i'm sure apple would just sue other companies if they did) than other manufactures. Besides manufacturing all their h/w products in China.)
      > iTunes + iPod + Fairplay(or no Fairplay) = vendor lock-in?
      > OSX lock-in w/ the Mac H/W (intel) . I payed for the OS, I have compatible hardware, I should be able to do whatever I want with it.

      I could fill entire pages but anyway heres some to get you clued in.

    69. Re:Uh-huh. by ComradeSnarky · · Score: 1

      Why not just uninstall Norton AV? You fixed the problem of being lagged out of games by installing an OS which wouldn't even let you play them?

    70. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you are confusing respect with tolerance.

    71. Re:Uh-huh. by dhasenan · · Score: 1

      Hey, be fair. MS Office is second-rate.

    72. Re:Uh-huh. by dhasenan · · Score: 1

      Linux is a kernel, not a business. And, it being a kernel, you should not anthropomorphize it.

    73. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Transgaming's doing a pretty good job of making Windows games playable on Linux! WINE works in a lot of cases, too.

      Plus Linux has Frozen Bubble ^.^

    74. Re:Uh-huh. by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      thanks

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    75. Re:Uh-huh. by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      I'll respect Microsoft the day they respect me.

      Just follow, for example, ODF v.s. EOOXML.

    76. Re:Uh-huh. by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Yes but now it's all MS cheerleading. That's not very attractive nor is it very fun. I mean why MS and not Maytag or something?

      --
      evil is as evil does
    77. Re:Uh-huh. by T23M · · Score: 1

      Wait a sec. Since when is "it's not so bad" cheerleading? That's ridiculous, and definitely not the dominating groupthink.

    78. Re:Uh-huh. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      If you've ever had to live in that sort of environment (where drug traffickers kill people on a regular basis), you'd know you have it exactly right. It's generally counter-productive to fuck with with violent criminals, especially if they are major features of your landscape and know where you live. "Respect" and "don't fuck with" certainly overlap in common usage. Which is not to say that we should honor either MS or drug dealers.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    79. Re:Uh-huh. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Why, does it hate being anthropomorphized? =)

      Sort of related, just to be an asshole I used to intentionally say "Linux Torvalds" instead of "Linus Torvalds" to aggravate a friend, just because I knew how he'd react. I always played dumb and let him correct me, but the next time we discussed OSS, I'd go back to calling Linus Linux. Good times.

      Me: That Linux guy is pretty smart.

      Friend: Which "Linux guy"?

      Me: You know, Linux Torvalds.

      Friend: Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaargh!

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    80. Re:Uh-huh. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I think it's sort of like sex. The best sex is always dirty.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    81. Re:Uh-huh. by rabidMacBigot() · · Score: 1

      Microsoft deserves repsect for essentially supporting every device and every peice of hardware on the market, a feat which Apple doesn't even try to do and that Linux is spotty on. Whether or not all the drivers you get end up being WHQL signed or not, they do make the effort and there is an impressive list of device compliance.
      They don't do a damn thing besides publish a driver API. Hardware vendors are the ones that do the heavy lifting to support their devices.
    82. Re:Uh-huh. by heybo · · Score: 1

      I would have to disagree with you. At least with me you must also "earn" respect. A problem I see in the world is people and corporations that make a lot of money seem to expect you to respect them for their money even while they are screwing you. Sorry but that don't cut it here. Yes when I meet a person for the first time I do show the respect that should be given to any human being. The moment that that person dis-respects me my respect for them goes right out the window.

    83. Re:Uh-huh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I appreciate engineering more than the best way to manipulate an ignorant user with claims of being "the best".


      I agree 100%. That's why I have to laugh every time teh Lunix or OSX claims it has 'the best' security. Same thing with Firefox! The sweet irony is that all of them lag way behind MS, who isn't even tooting it's own horn.

      Let the facts speak for you, I always say. That's why I've always been a satisfied user of Microsoft's fine products. And so long as they keep cranking out this kind of top quality software, I'll keep using it.
    84. Re:Uh-huh. by e2d2 · · Score: 1

      No not at all. Nothing unethical. But for instance the great marketing, it's worked for ubuntu and in turn linux. Let's take the positive and leave the negative. OSS doesn't need to dominate through force, we got common sense on our side.

    85. Re:Uh-huh. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Uninstalling Norton? Easier said than done, if I remember right, though maybe he didn't try.

      Anyway, it was his decision, not mine. I keep a Windows partition for the games I need it for, but we both still spend probably 95% of our gaming time on Linux. The difference is, he borrows a computer for the other 5%, while I boot my Windows partition.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  3. okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    like i have respect for SCO

  4. Respect? For M$? by bheer · · Score: 2, Informative

    What is this, Hug a Grizzly Bear Week? Be Nice to the Sharks Month? This man Zemlin is obviously either a shill or a sad deluded man who needs to be shipped off to the re-education camps as soon as possible!

    1. Re:Respect? For M$? by o'reor · · Score: 1
      "Hug a Grizzly Bear Week"

      I like that one. Really. ;-)

      --
      In Soviet Russia, our new overlords are belong to all your base.
    2. Re:Respect? For M$? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't we already have an april fool's this year?

    3. Re:Respect? For M$? by sootman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I bet he thinks that if we're nice to them, they'll be nice to us.

      Yeah. That didn't work in Kindergarten, and it doesn't work now.

      From TFA: "Open source vendors have to recognise that Windows is here to stay and that together with Microsoft it will form a duopoly in the market for operating systems."

      Um, what abour Mac OS X? You know, that "other" OS with a higher market share than Linux?

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    4. Re:Respect? For M$? by ricegf · · Score: 1

      Um, what abour Mac OS X? You know, that "other" OS with a higher market share than Linux?

      Uh, huh. Linux 3.9%, Mac 4.2%, Windows 88.0%, something like that?

      I'd like to live in a world of Linux 34%, Mac 33%, and Windows 33% (or some similar distribution that included Haiku, ReactOS, Gnu/Hurd, et. al.). Each person would choose their OS based on its ability to meet their needs, and all but the most performance-driven application developers would write portable applications.

      Now let's all join hands, sing Kum Ba Yah, and buy the world a Coke... :-/

    5. Re:Respect? For M$? by Enleth · · Score: 1

      No, it's Hug a 300lb Chair-wielding Gorilla Week.

      --
      This is Slashdot. Common sense is futile. You will be modded down.
    6. Re:Respect? For M$? by zullnero · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sorry. All I get out of this article, and Zemlin's statement, is pure sarcasm. Things Microsoft does well, including good marketing and chasing off competition? If that's a complement, that's really underhanded.

      A complement would be "Microsoft did a great job signing up and restricting certain hardware companies to make drivers only for their own operating system..." wait, no, that's not a complement at all. Oh, here's one: "Microsoft did an excellent job copying core functionality of the Mac during the genesis of their own GUI..." Oh, wait, sorry, that's not a complement either.

      Seriously, a complement and an embrace would be something along the lines of "Gee, we really need to respect Microsoft's dedication to creating a really great foundation of tools for third party developers, and maybe see if we can do that too."

      I guess maybe because I AM a developer and not a marketer, I just don't see the respect in "they market better than us".

    7. Re:Respect? For M$? by bheer · · Score: 1

      Ahem. That was meant to be funny (I thought the "re-education camps" bit gave it away). But the mods seem to have lost their sense of humor today.

    8. Re:Respect? For M$? by spyowl · · Score: 1

      Um, what abour Mac OS X? You know, that "other" OS with a higher market share than Linux?

      Want to back that up with anything? Because I didn't see the word "desktop" mentioned anywhere in the article.

      But of course, if it's a pro-Apple comment, it automatically gets a +x insightful points. Slashdot user preferences should have an option to adjust the score downwards for pro-Apple comments in non-Apple related stories.
    9. Re:Respect? For M$? by sootman · · Score: 1

      I'm not limiting it to desktops. Linux undoubtedly has more servers than Apple, but there are many, many more desktops in the world than servers. I think that more than makes up the difference.

      And Apple very much is relevant to this story. A Linux guy, talking about openness and happiness and everything else, says there's only two OSs in the world? WTF?!?!? Aren't these love-everyone, we're-all-equal, everyone's-a-winner types supposed to show love for ALL OSs, down to the last BeOS, OS/2, and Amiga user?

      As for the mods, I probably got that point for the first half of my post. I probably would have done better if I would have left it at that.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    10. Re:Respect? For M$? by indiejade · · Score: 1
      Agreed! I attended Zemlin's talk at the Linux World Expo, and if he was indeed being "sarcastic" about respecting Microsoft, it was a pretty well-cloaked sarcasm. I didn't really think about it like he was endorsing "respect" for M$ as an entity, per se, but that people should be able to see and therefore "respect" that there are some things that Microsoft does . . . well, well. If it didn't do *something* well, it wouldn't be the giant (*cough* tax-evading-Washington-state-does-not-have-income- tax) monolithic monstrosity that it is.

      Taking the analogy a bit further (in genuine /. fashion) maybe it could be likened to. . . McDonalds. M$ Windows is like the Big Mac of OSes. "Billions and billions" served, eh? Of course! Works for the impatient, lazy few who need their fix of fast food. Given that there is indeed demand for cheap, fast food, go right ahead -- scarf that Big Mac. Keep in mind, however, that demand for cheap, fast food does not exclude demand for a quality product . . . there is still room for a gourmet version of not-so-fast food (as in quality > quantity). This is where Linux and OSS companies and organizations can and should focus, imho.

      Hmmm. "If your operating system were a burger. . ." :)

    11. Re:Respect? For M$? by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      Now let's all join hands, sing Kum Ba Yah, and buy the world a Coke... :-/
      Oh, sure... you "solve" the computers OS debate problem but then you re-ignite an old war about cola by specifically mentionning Coke.

      What about Pepsi and RC Cola drinkers?

    12. Re:Respect? For M$? by spyowl · · Score: 1

      Linux undoubtedly has more servers than Apple, but there are many, many more desktops in the world than servers. I think that more than makes up the difference.

      Again, are you basing or backing up your assertion with anything? Or is that theory fresh out of your you know what?
    13. Re:Respect? For M$? by sootman · · Score: 1

      It's pretty well accepted that OS X has ~3-5% of non-server market share. Let's say 3%, or 1 in 30 computers is a Mac. Linux's consumer penetration is nearly nothing... let's be charitable and say 1%.

      Now, for servers, let's say Linux has 40% market share, the rest being Windows, Sun, etc. And let's just say that Mac has 0% penetration in this area.

      If the number of servers is S and the number of desktops is D, and the number of Macs is M and the number of Linux boxes is L,
      L = 0.01D+0.4S
      and
      M = 0.03D
      Let's pretend that the number of Linux boxes and Mac boxes is equal. That gives us
      0.01D+0.4S = 0.03D
      0.4S = 0.02D
      40S = 2D
      20S = D
      Now, in order for the number of Linux boxes to equal Macs, there would have to be one server for every 20 desktops. I don't know about you, but that sounds pretty high to me. Yes, there are a lot of companies and a lot of servers out there, and a lot of hosting companies, Google boxes, etc., but does it really sound correct to think that there's one server for every 20 desktops out there?

      (If you, or anyone else, wants to dig up lots and lots of good numbers and prove me wrong, feel free.)

      Even if that is correct--which I doubt--and even if I'm off by 100%--that there is 1 server for every 10 desktops out there, thus giving Linux a 2:1 lead over Macs... my main point still stands: for the author to totally dismiss Macs altogether is just... wrong. Didn't we all freak out just two months ago when Steve Jobs showed a slide showing IE and Safari, without Mozilla?

      http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/58070.html
      http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2007/01/17results. html

      Apple made $1 billion profit on $7 billion in revenue in the last quarter of 2006. Red Hat, if I'm reading that correctly, made $34 million on $119 million in one quarter earlier this year. Again--the author just totally dismisses them?

      In fact, if *any* OEM should be respected by OSS fans, it *should* be Apple. They've shown how you can take OSS, present it to the user in an attractive, easy-to-use manner, and make money. But no, what does he say? (I'm quoting TFA here, which didn't directly quote the author for this passage, so I'm assuming TFA is correct.) "Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition." So, he's saying that OSS users--a group who believes that good technology shoudl win over all--should respect MS becase a) they're good at ***marketing*** (which is the exact opposite of "the best technology should win") and b) for "fending off competition"--which, history has shown us, means "crushing" and "illegally abusing a monopoly" when it comes to MS.

      Yeah. Good call. That's *exactly* whom we should hold up as role models.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    14. Re:Respect? For M$? by sootman · · Score: 1

      OK, I found some real numbers.
      In 2006, "H-P claimed the top spot with 2.26 million units... Dell was second with 1.78 million shipments... IBM placed third on shipments of 1.3 million units... while Sun sold more than 368,000 servers"
      http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/gartner-says -server-shipments-revenue/story.aspx
      So, the top four sold about 5.7 million servers, and considering that 4th place is about 1/6 the size of first place, I'd say it's safe to assume that the numbers drop off considerably after that.

      (Another site says that the 8th, 9th, and 10th most popular servers--Acer, Hitachi, and Apple--sold 15,000 servers or less in one quarter.
      http://www.digitimes.com/systems/a20070604PD204.ht ml
      So yeah, the tail gets pretty thin, pretty fast.)

      So let's say that there were about 6 million servers sold in 2006. Guess what: in 2006, Apple sold over 5.6 million Macs.
      http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2006/apr/19results .html
      http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2006/jul/19results .html
      http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2006/oct/18results .html
      http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2007/01/17results. html

      So the number of Macs sold roughly equals the number of servers sold. BUT, as we all know, Apple only has about 5% of the market, so there are roughly 20x more consumer computers sold than servers. And as I said above, "in order for the number of Linux boxes to equal Macs, there would have to be one server for every 20 desktops."

      Wow. Am I a good estimator or what? :-)

      And remember--the point of this is not whether there are more Linux boxes or Macs out there. I know that the number of servers sold does not include all those boxes that someone put Linux onto for server use, and I don't know if servers or desktops last longer, etc etc etc. But no matter how far you push the numbers, the point is clear--Apple and Linux are probably very close to each other. One might be one-half or twice the size of the other, but they are both obviously QUITE large and they in the same league and neither should ignore the other. The fact is, Apple and Linux have comparable market share, and for this guy to totally dismiss Apple--by talking about a world where there is only MS and Linux--was wrong in several ways.

      There. Happy?

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  5. What the hell is the Linux Foundation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And why do they matter? Perhaps if Microsoft stopped threatening the use of patents, there could be some peace?

  6. So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by IBBoard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.


    So what he's saying is that Linux excels at being good software, while Microsoft only excel at marketing practices? Sounds like a double-edged compliment to Microsoft to me!
    1. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      That smart guy also said Microsoft excels at being a duopoly with Windows! Erm ... ok, whatever that means.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    2. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by Bazman · · Score: 1

      I'm with Bill Hicks on this:

      "By the way if anyone here is in advertising or marketing... kill yourself. No, no, no it's just a little thought. I'm just trying to plant seeds. Maybe one day, they'll take root - I don't know. You try, you do what you can. Kill yourself. Seriously though, if you are, do. Aaah, no really, there's no rationalisation for what you do and you are Satan's little helpers, Okay - kill yourself - seriously. You are the ruiner of all things good, seriously. No this is not a joke, you're going, "there's going to be a joke coming," there's no fucking joke coming. You are Satan's spawn filling the world with bile and garbage."

      Don't mod this Funny - there's no joke coming. Really. http://sazmatazz.users.btopenworld.com/ for the moreness.

    3. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 1

      It means that Microsoft software, plus the Windows operating system in general are a duopoly, their stuff, on their OS, or else. Period.

      He's got a point, and soon after I will be removing my last "windows" install that matters. My research laptop will go from dual boot windows to single boot linux. Hell Linux has had less issues on it (HP Pav Dv5k).

      It will be preference. Access and control over your own machine, or surrender it all to groupthink and continue to pay for microsoft's legal expenses. I say screw them and screw their shills and do whatever you want because you want to, not because some guy who owns stock in Microsoft says so.

      --
      " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
    4. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by SgtKremlin · · Score: 1

      There is also a few things Microsoft does pretty disastrously, like... memory allocation, respecting privacy, respecting the user's choice in using other software in adjunct, providing the ability to use old software/hardware concurrently with new microsoft products...

    5. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by Bombula · · Score: 2, Informative
      Unfortunately, marketing is a necessary evil. And not just in business. You have to sell yourself, you have to sell your merits, you have to promote and promulgate your ideas and your beliefs and your values, whether your a person or a business or any other kind of organization or institution.

      But if by marketing you just mean the crap that's on TV intermixed with the shows, well, fair enough.

      --
      A-Bomb
    6. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by Speed+Pour · · Score: 1

      So what he's saying is that Linux excels at being good software, while Microsoft only excel at marketing practices? Sounds like a double-edged compliment to Microsoft to me! You know, that's not really a double-edged compliment at all if you look at this from a broader view. Microsoft is the reason that almost every home and business has a computer today.

      Let's be honest, at least until recently, most people in the country couldn't even approach Linux without an in-home guru to tell them how it works. Windows has been largely user friendly throughout the last decade (at least once post-install driver issues are resolved), something that Linux hasn't been able to claim. Without MS Windows, many computer-challenged sods would be too afraid to buy a computer or do anything with it if they did buy it. Microsoft may have some pretty bad things going for/against it, but they do deserve credit, both marketing and development, for bringing most people into the computer world.

      Of course, it's also time that people get ready to lose the training wheels and move onto better things.
      --
      - Nobody would know what RTFA meant if it didn't need to be said all the time
    7. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, marketing is a necessary evil. And not just in business.
      The different between communism and capitalism is the existence of marketing?
      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    8. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by IBBoard · · Score: 1

      I don't know, for a development company then I wouldn't be too happy if the only good points people could find were non-development related. It just seems like he's complimenting their marketing while also slyly (and presumably intentionally) not applauding their development. It's one of those "not what he says, but what he doesn't say" things.

      As for being user friendly, yes, they have managed that. IMO they've also done well with C# and .Net, especially since it was opened up and Mono and many other related implementations and languages now use the framework.

      Whether or not it's for the best that the "computer-challenged sods" can get online is another matter ;) Yes, I wouldn't have been computer savvy at one point, but having a certain level of desire and intent required at first would have stopped many things like botnets becoming such an issue :)

    9. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by ardle · · Score: 1

      I believe the umbrella term is Public Relations?

    10. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the clarification. But I still think "duopoly" is a bad metaphor because it would have two involve two different market entities.

      Anyway, I went Linux-only two years ago because of numerous reasons, the main one being I felt screwed and crippled in multiple ways. I have never looked back to that strange Windows culture of suffering.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    11. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by catbutt · · Score: 1

      True, and AOL's proprietary online network is the reason everyone goes online today, because AOL has 95% share, and only geeks can use the scary internet.

      Oh wait, sorry, just got back from an alternate universe, where that's how it worked out there.

    12. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 1

      LordToran... Lord Toranaga perhaps? Good book.

      Now back to Linux. Agreed that the Windows world was suffering, but for awhile, when I got this laptop, the 2.6/2.4 kernels had some crap support for my wireless chip (as in none), and since Atheros are a***oles I refused to patronize their business and buy one of their chips. Since HP already threw windows on here (albeit charging me for the code but not allowing me the option for a barebones laptop), I decided to use it for awhile until I either had the time to learn enough about my wireless chipset, or I actually find a working driver.

      Otherwise I've been mostly windows free (except at work) since about 1998. That's when my great "migration" began, and I only went back out of necessity for the job I took in IT. (I had done some pen testing beforehand and found that having a windows rig, legit or not, helped with testing of new code.) Nowadays that windows virtualization is so easy and reliable, and I can do my pen testing from within a sandbox, I don't much use it except on other people's machines and when it comes preinstalled as it did on this laptop.

      As for "bad drivers", I still found more of those in the "line of duty" in Windows 2000 and XP, than I did in Linux. Only complaint I had was with ACPI support about 3 years ago. But that's been worked on, and as far as I'm concerned, the ACPI CPU states now work better in Linux than they do in Windows (still have issues with the HP not restoring network status in windows and requiring a reboot after standby. I am not alone either, it is a VERY widespread problem. The linux side has NO such issue however.)

      If you get the chance, stay away from Solaris (Sun are not exactly very nice business people either) and try out BSD. When I had more time to watch it, I used to run a standard FreeBSD box on a DMZ on my LAN and let it get hacked ten ways to Sunday. It boggles the mind the kind of things people do to rigs on the open net. But for a machine that did little else, it was worth watching, quite entertaining actually.

      --
      " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
    13. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      "Lord Toran" is just a fantasy name I thought out in my younger years when I was strongly into paper & pencil roleplaying :-)

      I have been interested in Open Source since 1998 (when I ditched MS Office 97 for StarOffice 5.2), but it hadn't been until 2005 that I felt confident enough to make the jump to Linux. At that point, I had started to hate Windows so much for its shortcomings (especially the crappy filesystem that nuked my data and occasionally whole disks), that I made the switch the hard way (no dual boot) and decided to never look back. I never regretted my decision.

      I have to admit that Solaris is my favorite for a "real" Unix, but it doesn't seem to have a real hobbyist community. I think I'll try FreeBSD first when I need a more advanced operating system.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    14. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      "Microsoft is the reason that almost every home and business has a computer today." I really can't believe you could really believe this. It wasn't as if MS was easier to use (compare using DOS to Apple's Macintosh) initially, or even after windows came along (I owned windows versions 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, and then finally at 3.1 it was not a joke). It wasn't until *after* MS established market dominance that their software improved.

    15. Re:So MS does marketting, Linux does software? by cumin · · Score: 1

      I think I said this before Novell partnered with MS, and it made me twitch when that happened, but I'll bring it up again anyway.

      Yes, MS sells the heck out of software, even bad software. Several companies out there turn out good versions of Linux (take your pick of Debian, SUSE, Red Hat, Gentoo, Ubuntu or whatever your personal pet distro happens to be.) MS is good at picking up other companies work and selling it as their own, and obviously it works with Linux (see Oracle.)

      Microsoft should sell Linux! They can take anything they like, add stuff to it, add in non-oss software to their distro and brand it as MS Snowball Linux. It would sell. Not only would it sell but it would let them leach off of the work of other companies legally. It would let them contribute to the open source community which in turn should improve competition and nobody, but nobody could manage integration with existing Windows networks like MS could.

      And that snowball? No, I don't think it has much of a chance.

      --
      Back in my day when we chiseled our bits into stone and sent them by mule train from village to village...
  7. Wait, what? by Virak · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm supposed to respect them because they're bigger than everyone else and thus can put more money into marketing and abuse their monopoly to crush competitors with underhanded tactics? How about they stop making shitty software and play nice with everyone else? Maybe I'd respect them then, but I'll certainly not respect them for what they do now.

    1. Re:Wait, what? by vvulfe · · Score: 1

      "To know your Enemy, you must become your Enemy." -- Sun Tzu

    2. Re:Wait, what? by MPAB · · Score: 1

      Were they born bigger than everyone else?

    3. Re:Wait, what? by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about they stop making shitty software and play nice with everyone else?

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine. Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002 and then went back and haven't returned.

      Vista was a mistake (much like 3.11 or ME) but they have made some OSs that are quite solid, work just fine for the majority of users, and are deployed (tactics or not) on 100s of millions of computers.

      I don't think Microsoft should be hailed for their business practices but they certainly haven't always made "shitty" software.

    4. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of their software isn't "shitty" these days. Take .NET. As a common runtime, it's far better than Java. Sun is trying to make the Java platform less Java language-specific, with the work on JRuby and Groovy. But .NET was designed from the bottom-up to support more than one language. Java just can't compete with that. And the open source efforts, especially Parrot, have floundered.

      Parrot had so much potential, but became such a joke. One of the big problems was the acronym hell they created. It's damn near impossible for most hobbyist developers to make any sort of a contribution, as it takes forever just to understand all the acronyms they've dreamt up. Beyond that, they went and kept changing their intermediate languages and representations. It's such a moving target that anything you write for it now will be outdated in two or three months. So why even bother?

    5. Re:Wait, what? by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Diplomacy is saying "nice doggie" while you look for a bigger stick.

    6. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      When I was just a computer geek, I thought this way, too. How dare they peddle this crap? Once I got out into the real world, though, things are different. Computers are important, but they're not everything. Windows sucks -- oh boo hoo.

      The "Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation" gives hundreds of millions (billions?) of dollars every year worldwide for health, education, and poverty. Where'd the money come from? Windows licenses, of course. Assuming Bill follows through with his promise to donate the vast majority of his fortune (which I believe), then, Microsoft is a pretty interesting company.

      They channel massive amounts of money from consumers who don't know much about computers, into improving the lives of countless people around the world.

      Let's face it: if you can afford a computer, you're not *that* bad off. He's simply adding a voluntary $100-or-so tax to every PC, and helping to push some of that to people who need it more than you.

      It's a crap operating system, but building a great system takes a lot more work. If he spent the time and money to make it great, the margins would be lower, and he might have gotten eaten by Apple or NeXT or Be. So while I don't like Windows (and don't use it, at work or at home), and I don't claim that Bill started out with this plan, I do respect the work that he's doing now.

      Please, everybody, keep buying Windows licenses. Or even better, install Linux, and donate the price of a Windows license directly to your favorite charity. Because in the big picture, if you own the computer you're reading this on, you're one of the richest people in the world.

    7. Re:Wait, what? by cmacb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine. Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002 and then went back and haven't returned.


      It may not be shitty in an absolute sense, but given the amount of money and time that have been spent on it, shitty it still is. If our industry was composed of several large operating system companies rather than one behemoth and a dozen hanging on by their fingernails we would be much much better off. Microsoft didn't get where they are primarily by the strength of their technology offerings but by other less ethical means. Bait and switch, kickbacks, embrace and extinguish, buyout and extinguish and numerous similar gimmickry do more to describe the company than any feature set, or heaven forbid "innovation" that they are responsible for. They are where they are for little other reason than the federal government (followed by the states) eventually standardized on their products forcing a chain reaction of most companies to do likewise.

      If they made any other product than software (which still possesses a mysterious legal immunity) they would have been sued out of business by now.

      Given the amount of time and money they have had to spend on it, it would be a miracle if they hadn't achieve some degree of stability by now, as it is, it is a miracle that they have achieved as little as they have.

      Glad you are enjoying your Microsoft experience again. I switched to Linux in the late 90's too and have seen no reason to go back. Linux is marginally harder to install, but the "thrill" of re-installing operating systems wore off for me while I was still a Windows user. Maybe you actually look forward to each "new" release.
    8. Re:Wait, what? by Virak · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty".
      I've used both 2000 and XP. I still wince whenever I have to use someone else's computer and they use Windows, because I can't do even half of the stuff I can on a *nix box.

      it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine.
      It doesn't even come close to Linux for anything.

      Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002 and then went back and haven't returned.
      Please note that I dual-booted Linux since 2001 and have been using it exclusively with no problems for the last few years, and I'll never return.

      they have made some OSs that ... work just fine for the majority of users
      If by "work just fine" you mean "are riddled with massive security holes through which countless malware comes" then yes, they do.

      I don't think Microsoft should be hailed for their business practices but they certainly haven't always made "shitty" software.
      No, they've been making shitty software since approximately forever. Sure, not all of their software has been shitty, but the vast majority has and continues to be.
    9. Re:Wait, what? by robgig1088 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002

      Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002

      1997 through 2002 Perhaps the reason you think that is because you used Linux for the last time 5 years ago. Want to know why theres so many Linux users today (myself included)? Because it's now better than Windows.
    10. Re:Wait, what? by syntaxglitch · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine. Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002 and then went back and haven't returned.

      Myself, I use XP at my day job and Linux at home. The home computer has been a Linux desktop for the last 2-3 years. Overall I find Linux to be a more pleasant experience for my purposes; it's less prone to mystery errors, the documentation is better, and the system is often more responsive even on slower hardware than my work machine.

      That's not to say that XP isn't a fine, decent piece of software, but it hardly blows Linux out of the water. It may be better depending on what you want to use the machine for, but it's not a clear victory. I use VS.NET at my day job also, and it's hardly crap software either. Even the much-maligned IE won the browser wars on its own merits, back in the day.

      The problem I have with Microsoft is not that their software sucks, it's that they consistently provide products that are merely acceptable, only barely beating out equivalent open-source software, and any "innovation" usually has more to do with copying other people than breaking new ground. They do okay, but they really ought to be capable of doing better than just "good enough". Especially if you look at the amazing stuff that comes out of Microsoft Research, then compare it to the "copy Apple's ideas, slowly and at much greater expense" that is Vista. They're clearly capable of making better software--just look at the huge improvement that IE7 is over IE6, but why on earth did it take them so long?

      I just don't get it. How do you take a company that employs huge numbers of very smart people, has ungodly amounts of money, dominates multiple markets, and then manage to produce only mediocre software, very slowly and at great expense? What are they doing all day in there?

    11. Re:Wait, what? by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 1

      Funny, I feel the complete opposite. When I use XP it feels sluggish and as if it's going to crash at any moment, it's like I have to handle it with kid gloves and still it will do things like hang applications for no damn reason often.

      Where as when I use my PC (Ubuntu) it runs nicely, effectively and it very rarely acts up (only issue I have is with the mouse over sound files playing and getting stuck in a loop I can't make STFU without a reboot). It feels more stable and does a lot more things out of the box than Windows does (although to be honest if MS did that we would see monopoly lawsuits from everyone like we did with media player).

      You've said you've not tried Linux in 5 years. Well in that case we need to compare it to Windows from 5 years ago other wise you're not judging both products fairly and giving 1 a huge advantage.

      --
      I like muppets.
    12. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine. Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002 and then went back and haven't returned.

      Yeah, well please note that I ran(run) Linux as my main OS from 1996 through to the present day, and I have no intention of going back to Windows. I think it's shitty too. Stop acting like your opinion is the only one that counts. If the OP thinks that it's shitty and you don't think that it's shitty, that means you have a difference of opinion, not that your opinion is fact and his is wrong.

    13. Re:Wait, what? by WalkingFish · · Score: 1

      No, he's right. 5 years is not a long time in the computer world. Linux on the desktop hasn't changed a bit. Professional committed developers are never happy with crappy software. For example, see how much Windows has improved by comparing 3.1 vs. Vista. Crap. Bad analogy.

    14. Re:Wait, what? by WalkingFish · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Come on Moderators, give the parent Funny (+1). I haven't laughed this hard in a month.

    15. Re:Wait, what? by garcia · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the reason you think that is because you used Linux for the last time 5 years ago. Want to know why theres so many Linux users today (myself included)? Because it's now better than Windows.

      I guess I wasn't clear enough. I last used Linux as my only OS on the desktop in 2002. I still run Linux (and have since 1997) as a server OS but it has made no improvements (in fact, the "desktop" software for X is even more bloated, slow, and horrifying than it was in 2002) since I left it which is why it remains relegated to SMTP, DNS, HTTP, SSH, etc all of which is does VERY well.

    16. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine. Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002 and then went back and haven't returned."

      A lot has changed since 2002 buddy. Linux as a desktop system has progressed by leaps and bounds, and IMHO surpasses what is available in XP by quite a wide margin. I suggest you look at Suse or Ubuntu before you make up your mind.

      Your loss if you choose to stick with Windows.

    17. Re:Wait, what? by jimicus · · Score: 2, Informative

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine. Please note that I ran Linux as my only OS from 1997 through 2002 and then went back and haven't returned.

      Yes. In fact, I'm responsible for system management for a number of them.

      I'll happily accept that XP and 2000 are miles ahead of '9x.

      The main problems I have are:

      1. Their lack of respect for established, published standards. Linux and Mac OS X can both be fairly easily configured to authenticate against LDAP out of the box - Windows requires that you use a Windows domain (either NT4-style or AD). (Yes, I know AD is in essence LDAP+Kerberos+proprietary addons. Please point me at a third-party functioning implementation if it's so standard. Shouldn't be that hard - it's only existed since Windows 2000).

      2. Their cavalier attitude to logging issues. Practically every Unix system I've ever seen could log almost everything that happens on the system in an absurd level of detail. Windows, on the other hand, has the Event Log which isn't even very widely used by Microsoft software, let alone third-party apps. Have you any idea how much easier it is to troubleshoot a system when there are logs available?

      Doubtless I could think of a few more, but those are the most obvious that spring to mind.

    18. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 3.11 for Workgroups is the least problematic operating i've used, in all it's simplicity. Snappy, useful and pretty darn stable when you had mainstream hardware.

      On a related note... I wish I had Word 2.0 on XP and Vista - it was an improvement over all later versions of Word.

    19. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Want to know why theres so many Linux users today (myself included)?

      Ha ha, yes, there are a lot of Linux desktop users, ha ha.

    20. Re:Wait, what? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine.

      Are you kidding? KDE beats the pants off of XP any day. Virtual desktops, kioslaves, amarok, krusader, even a simple "always on top" option. These are all things I use every day on linux and are unavailable on windows. Not to mention apt. XP is really kind of pathetic in comparison to a modern linux system.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    21. Re:Wait, what? by lordtoran · · Score: 2, Funny

      For example, see how much Linux has improved by comparing Slackware 1.0 to Kubuntu Feisty. Crap. Bad analogy.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    22. Re:Wait, what? by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      Yes, there are. And "ha ha" doesn't change too much about it.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    23. Re:Wait, what? by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      in fact, the "desktop" software for X is even more bloated, slow, and horrifying than it was in 2002 You must have used GNOME.

      Sorry, couldn't resist.
      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    24. Re:Wait, what? by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not shitty". It's certainly not the best thing ever, but it sure as fuck beats using Linux for a desktop machine. Really? On the few occasions I have used Microsoft's desktop in the last few years I found it clumsy, non-intuitive, slow and incomplete compared to KDE. At times I really wonder why all those Windows users put up with it. Oh right, they don't know anything else.
      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    25. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He must have used GNOME on nVidia -- there's a longstanding bug in the nVidia proprietary driver that causes GTK2 render performance to suck big old wet donkey balls. Try switching to the nv driver for an afternoon, and GNOME feels much more responsive. (Better yet, try it on a recent Intel chipset -- it flys.)

    26. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, every distro I've ever used, has up and died(refuses to boot) on simple package installations. Debian, gentoo, redhell.

      I keep having to go back to Win2k as a "temporary" solution while I get the linux install fixed/re-installed. It works so well I keep wondering why I even try to use Linux.

      Pretty much everything you can do, you can do on windows and then more.

      I hate to say it, It's just not worth the trouble.

    27. Re:Wait, what? by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      Depends what you're running. The software I run on Linux for weeks solid (specifically, freenet) will crash windows in about 10 minutes. Long before it even gets anywhere near fully started up. And if it's a problem in the code, it's a failure of Sun, not of freenet, because it's Java, and it's the EXACT same code, so it could only be in either how the different JVMs interpret it or the OS itself.

      Yes, there are things Windows is better for. Mostly, things that don't need extremely good uptimes or large amounts of system resources. Pretty much, it's better for things that need large corporate support (drivers, games, etc). In other words, they're better for the stuff that they get from other companies for being number one, which they got by cheating, lying, and stealing.

      So yea, for Joe Average, Windows may be the better desktop system. But for my uses...I've been running Linux for years and never had any desire to switch back permanently. I have occasionally temporarily for games, but that's it.

      Oh, and if you can't tell by my writing style, I'm not some system administrator or uber-geek. Hell, I don't even have a real driver's license yet. Still in highschool, and I run Linux full-time, my brother runs Linux full-time, my best friend runs Linux full-time, hell, even my girlfriend (who is a language geek, not a computer geek) uses Linux full-time. So it may not be the easiest, but for anyone with a bit of common sense and logic, it _is_ finally ready for home desktop usage. (though barely - I wouldn't have said that even last year.)

    28. Re:Wait, what? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      I find most of the people who ridicule Windows don't really know shit about it. Most of you jerkoff anti-MS zealots seem very ridiculous to pretty much any serious professional in the IT/software world. You people are the angry, contrarian teenagers still angrily trying to define yourselves by rebelling against "mom" (Microsoft). I'm almost...wait. Yep. I'm positive. You all disgust me. This whole article and the replies are hilarious.

    29. Re:Wait, what? by tigerhawkvok · · Score: 1

      I have not found a single thing that a *nix machine can do that Windows cannot. Just like Linux requires a familiarity with the terminal, Windows requires familiarity with cmd prompt/powershell and where the administrative tools are. There was a single time I tried to use Linux on my main machine. The slow boot, the difficulty in things as simple as installing, driver incompatibility, etc made me turn around and never look back. Now, I frequently use Solaris/OpenSUSE/Ubuntu in my lab, so I *do* know what I'm talking about. And there are some commands that are easier in terminal over cmd, but that's just a matter of preference. Hint -- look for the UNIX subsystem in Windows. Its built into some versions, downloadable on others, and you can use Cygwin if nothing else. If I need *nix operability, I use the Unix subsystem. I admit it -- I prefer SSH/FTP/LaTeX from the command line.

      --
      Blog
    30. Re:Wait, what? by Tom · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty". I have, and it is. Maybe that's because my point of comparison is OS X, not Linux (which, I'll agree, also pretty much sucks as a desktop OS).

      Funny thing is: Almost everyone I know who has switched to OS X during the past two years or so agrees completely on this, so it's not that I'm a nutcase. There are hundreds of small details that make up the "user experience", and that make it painfully obvious that XP is just a piece of quickly cobbled-together cheap chinese copy.

      You don't notice this when you just "poke around" a Mac in your local hardware store for five minutes. But use a Mac for a week and you'll know why I say XP is shitty.
      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    31. Re:Wait, what? by rawler · · Score: 1

      Well, I just can't resist responding to this;

      I just wanted to remind you, and everyone else reading this, that if Microsoft gets to decide, there would BE no SMTP, DNS, and CERTAINLY no SSH.

      SMTP - for Microsoft replaced with several proprietary protocols in the Exchange Server. (Does anyone know if intra-domain protocols are also covered?)
      DNS - Well, except for many previous attempts to divert name-resolution to other protocols, the last in the line is probably the patent-covered PNRP (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PNRP)
      SSH - Why would you need secured shells when RDP is the ultimate protocol?

      There are of course a LOT more examples.

      From a very naive perspective, one would just consider it another case of the old NIH-flu. From a more suspicious view, one might wonder why it seems most of the Microsoft-preferred technologies gets booby-trapped with Microsoft-patents. (Yes, even the ECMA-release specs are usually patent-covered and a damn mine-field to walk through.)

      THIS is why Microsoft is despised, and also why it's huge. You just don't get that big without screwing a lot of people over. Any discussions of the technical merits of the Microsoft solutions are more or less irrelevant, this considered.

    32. Re:Wait, what? by neapolitan · · Score: 1

      Diplomacy is the art of saying "nice doggie" until you can find a rock. -Winston Churchill

      You're erroneously combining British wit with Teddy Roosevelt's popular quote, "Speak softly and carry a big stick."

      I suppose it is better than the other way, "Speak softly and carry a big doggie?"

      --
      Slashdotter, ID #101. UIDs are in binary, right?
    33. Re:Wait, what? by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Diplomacy is the art of saying "nice doggie" until you can find a rock. -Winston Churchill

      You're erroneously combining British wit with Teddy Roosevelt's popular quote, "Speak softly and carry a big stick." It'd be erroneous if I had been claiming it was a quote by Winston Churchill. I rather thought the two combined nicely. :)
    34. Re:Wait, what? by cumin · · Score: 1

      You have a point, the jerkoff anti-MS zelots seem very ridiculous. That said, there are plenty of "Windows rulz" zelots that seem just as ridiculous. Still though, that's criticizing the communities, not the software or companies. The companies are made up of far too many individuals and there is far too much history for me to offer insight. There are plenty of programs too, but the article was about Microsoft and Linux. Lets zoom in on them for a moment shall we?

      I'm an IT professional, and I install and administer Windows servers, mostly 2003, but some 2000 and two NTs in there for good measure. (This week maybe down to one? Here's hoping.)

      I also administer Linux servers, and though they weren't mentioned in the article, I must include Unix servers. I don't claim to know everything there is to know about any of them, but I know enough to guide the buying decisions for a pretty good size financial company. Our organization uses DB2, MySQL and MS SQL. We use PHP, Perl, and some older and more arcane stuff as well. We use software from SUN, IBM, EMC, Microsoft and a host of other big names plus a good handful of companies you have hopefully never heard of. Each has its place, strengths and weaknesses. I'd say I'm in a position to be fair minded in comparing them.

      We pay a lot for Windows and MS SQL and do functionally the same sorts of things with Red Hat and MySQL. The support is about the same quality from either, but the price is a heck of a lot different and Windows servers take a LOT more babysitting. Unix? Well we pay outrageous amounts for it and more for maintenance and support than I get paid, but it does things for us that would be a nightmare to replicate with Windows and merely terribly, terribly difficult with Linux. Our developers tend to prefer Linux but they use Windows as well and there again, Linux wins in the amount of time and money it takes to manage.

      If I had to make a generalization I'd say:

      • All other things being equal, go with Linux and for mission critical stuff, buy it with support
      • Go with Windows if you need to hire inexperienced developers for software with a short life-cycle. (If it's long term, you won't save money with inexperienced developers and if you have experienced developers then trust them to tell you what OS they need.)
      • Go with Unix if you are willing to spend like a drunken sailor with somebody else's wallet. If money is no object, then pay the big bucks and you can get the finest, best supported and most stable systems available. HP-UX, Solaris, AS400 and AIX systems with enough money thrown at them are unbeatable. (I would have said SCO but the future looks ugly, and besides, they are evil.)
      • If your work is something that won't change much for ten year spans and you can afford good people, go with BSD. If you can support it and do the development right, you can get the same out of it you would a hard core Unix system, but at a fraction of the support cost. It will mean that your support will probably need to come primarily from in house though instead of just paying off the Unix guys.

      The problem you will face with any OS choice is a trade off, with good reason. Those that don't have something going for them are unavailable. Windows comes with serious management time and moderately icky pricing, Linux with an unreasonably high quotient of community jerks and Unix with ugly price tags. (Never tried running Apple servers so I can't say one way or the other there, but the desktops are nice. Yes, I have supported the desktops.)

      Bottom line: There is no need to be rabidly for or against any OS and that part of TFA makes sense.

      Disclaimer: There are exceptions to everything, and if you're doing something like clustering or database development, you should ignore everything here and better know enough not to look to a slashdot post for guidance. If your shop needs Apple, and you've got the expertise, go for it. If you're selling mini-servers with Xenix (don't laugh, it was only a c

      --
      Back in my day when we chiseled our bits into stone and sent them by mule train from village to village...
    35. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny, I was just about to post to the gp that I'd give it to him that KDE was shit compared to windows, but gnome is far superior in every way

    36. Re:Wait, what? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1
      I would tend to disagree about the long term projects and inexperienced developers. Windows does cost, but SQL server is far out of the league of e.g. MySQL and Postgres. There's just so much more you can do with it. Microsoft actually does "OK" in OS's, I won't claim they're perfect but no OS is perfect. They excel in a few key areas, though, and your average drooling, closed-minded dirty UNIX guy hasn't the slightest clue.

      1. SQL server. Works well, easy to manage, very easy to develop against. The last point is why SQL server, if you can afford it, is a no-brainer for any enterprise level development project.
      2. .NET. It's ironic when UNIX people knock .NET. It's absolutely light years ahead of anything in the UNIX realm (well, except Mono ;). Take web services. There is no better platform for easily developing standards compliant, cutting edge web services than .NET. Period. It's not even a close contest.
      3. Visual Studio. 2005. Orcas. Enough said to anyone who has ever developed real software.
      4. Enterprise Library and all the other goodies MS produces to help developers develop industrial strength software.
      5. MSDN.
      6. Team Foundation System.
      7. IIS 6/7. They work very well. Typical UNIX nerds, being stuck in the past, like to think of IIS pre-6 when they denigrate it.

      I've developed in Linux/UNIX and going back to it would be painful. I work in the semiconductor industry and Linux is becoming the platform of choice for design engineering/EDA and I think it does and should dominate in that domain. It's far easier to "glue" applications together in UNIX based OS's, and this is a lot of what happens in EDA design. So don't get me wrong, Linux is absolutely superior in some domains.

      Linux is, however, some primitive ass shit when it comes to shrink wrap and Enterprise level software development.

      As for the idea that Windows is better for inexperienced developers - true, it is. "I can click and drool" developers do better in Windows. But that is orthogonal to high quality professional developers. There are far more quality, professional, high end developers in Windows simply because the market is larger and the tools for developing Windows software are superior.

    37. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I last used Linux as my only OS on the desktop in 2002. I still run Linux (and have since 1997) as a server OS but it has made no improvements (in fact, the "desktop" software for X is even more bloated, slow, and horrifying than it was in 2002)

      You last used Linux on the desktop five years ago, and now only use it for servers, yet you feel qualified to pass judgement on how well it performs today as a desktop OS? Right.

      Which "desktop software" are you talking about, anyway? Each new version of KDE from 3.0 onwards has consistently improved performance. It's certainly not getting more bloated.

  8. Microsoft is so... 1998 by RunFatBoy.net · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah, acknowledging MS's strengths is a lot like going to your grandparents 50th wedding anniversary; you're thankful for the legacy that they've left behind but at 70 years old and playing Friday night bingo, they're not quite relevant in the same way they use to be.

    MS has lost it's way ( as documented in Joel's "How Microsoft Lost the API War" ) and with applications moving more towards the web as a platform, things don't look to improve.

    Jim
    RunFatBoy ( http://www.runfatboy.net/ ) - Exercise for the rest of us.

  9. Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Orson Scott Card

    I am your enemy, the first one you've ever had who was smarter than you. There is no teacher but the enemy. No one but the enemy will ever tell you what the enemy is going to do. No one but the enemy will ever teach you how to destroy and conquer. Only the enemy shows you where you are weak. Only the enemy tells you when he is strong. And the rules of the game are what you can do to him and what you can stop him from doing to you. I am your enemy from now on. From now on, I am your teacher. - Ender's Game

    In the moment when I truly understand my enemy, understand him well enough to defeat him, then in that very moment I also love him. I think it's impossible to really understand somebody, what they want, what they believe, and not love them the way they love themselves. And then, in that very moment when I love them.... I destroy them. I make it impossible for them to ever hurt me again. I grind them and grind them until they don't exist. - Ender's Game And similar to that is his quote on war:

    You can't defeat a powerful enemy unless you understand him completely, and you can't understand him unless you know the desires of his heart, and you can't know the desires of his heart until you truly love him.

    Hiding from your enemy is the same as letting him win. - Seventh Son Quotes from Sun Tzu

    To know your Enemy, you must become your Enemy.

    Know your enemy and know yourself, find naught in fear for 100 battles. Know yourself but not your enemy, find level of loss and victory. Know thy enemy but not yourself, wallow in defeat every time. I think it's clear that you must respect your enemy to even compete against them. If you don't respect that Microsoft has a great marketing, legal & business development department, you aren't going to get far. Know your enemy, understand them, respect them--only then can you become greater than them.

    Poking fun at them is only a sign of overconfidence as Luke once said to Darth Vadar & Emperor Palpatine

    Your overconfidence is your weakness.
    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Torodung · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know, I was with you until you quoted "Luke Skywalker..." Then I couldn't stop giggling.

      Should I get you a copy of Bartlett's for your birthday? I mean there's got to be someone else who said "pride goeth before a fall," right? ;^)

      --
      Toro

    2. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by amightywind · · Score: 2, Funny

      High minded thinking indeed. But I'm more suited to hurl insults at M$ from the safety of my Gentoo machine in my mother's basement.

      --
      an ill wind that blows no good
    3. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bravo! Quotes from such "luminaries" as a creator of wacked-out visions of vile dog-eat-dog distopias, which the said author fondly dreams of bringing to real life under the name of "Libertarianism", then from a bloodthirsty cretin, whose prime occupation was beheading defensless concubines as "demonstrations" for petty Chinese "monarchs", when not busy overseeing rape and pillage of peasants by bands of thugs and whose main "achievment" was the fact that unlike most of his contemporaries he could use a brush to put his idiocy to parchment, crowned by a quote from a fictional character in a fantasy entertainment flick. All we can do is to shake in our collective boots from the onslaught of such torrent of wisdom .... not.

    4. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You assume the whole point of the FOSS community is to compete with MS, seems like your the one thats overconfident is this case.

      Now, if you dont mind, i must return to laughing at all those still running AV scanners daily on their MS products. hehehehehehheh

    5. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by morhook · · Score: 1

      Very good quotes. Some Linux Fans are acting like reactionists. 95% against almost nothing!

    6. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1

      You forgot 'The enemy of my enemy is my enemies friends enemy, my friend.'

    7. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by asuffield · · Score: 1

      Poking fun at them is only a sign of overconfidence


      That would be a really insightful bit of psychobabble if it wasn't nonsense. Poking fun at somebody is usually merely a sign of amusement. It's very easy to be amused by Microsoft, because they do so stunningly badly at most things they attempt (remember that of all the thousands of projects they have attempted to make and sell, only Windows and Office have ever shown a significant profit; the rest of the company bleeds money by the billions).
    8. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Skrapion · · Score: 1

      "It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations." --Winston Churchill

      --
      The details are trivial and useless; The reasons, as always, purely human ones.
    9. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      remember that of all the thousands of projects they have attempted to make and sell, only Windows and Office have ever shown a significant profit; the rest of the company bleeds money by the billions WTF? The company as the whole is profitable. Business success is not judged by how perfect you are at absolutely everything, you know.

      Do us all a favour and think before you post next time.
    10. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1
      For all your gibber jabber and meaningfully imparted quotes (did you half-close your eyes and give a deep, thoughful look when you typed those?), you still don't get it. Microsoft isn't just marketing, legal, and business development. I see you (not subtly) left out the developers at Microsoft. Nice attempt, but the fact is Microsoft has the best software developers in the world. Go look around on MSDN and read up a bit on some of the stuff MS is doing in the SW dev world. It's light years ahead of what the FOSS community considers advanced.

      Seriously, you people can delude yourselves and think MS hires a bunch of idiots all you want, but this aspect of capitalism (money attracts talent) is why FOSS will never, ever "win" the way you all want it to.

    11. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulations on your stunning inability to read the GP's post. There's a big gap between "imperfect" and "spectacular failure at nearly everything", and it's a pretty funny gap.

    12. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude. It's a company. Companies are judge by only one criteria - profitability.

    13. Re:Old Idea, Some Quotes to Reinforce by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      MSDN and read up a bit on some of the stuff MS is doing in the SW dev world

      You mean you're happy to be a VB6 developer held at the whim of M$ board decisions. Seriously, everything on MSDN is as fragile as a candle in the wind, did you visit the Visual Fox Pro forum? I was amazed it was there at all, but where is the C programming for windows forum, is it all VC++ and C#? The only thing Microsoft is keen on doing with MSDN is turning everyone there into Microsoft Developers, every language there is another proprietary format tooled with the purpose of locking you in.

      Maybe, ten years from now when all the "visual C sharp" jobs have dried up, and you can't program in "intuitive C star" you'll understand why I think MSDN is VB6 on steroids and crack. It's easier for M$ to alienate their older workers by changing the languages used for development every ten years or so.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
  10. Sarcasm by ZigiSamblak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This also requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it. "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"

    Saying all Microsoft has ever done well is marketing and fending off competition is setting an example for not ridiculing them? I believe he's just being sarcastic.

    1. Re:Sarcasm by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


            Doesn't Zemlin have any idea how Microsoft got its good track record fending off the competition?

        rd

    2. Re:Sarcasm by kripkenstein · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that did read like humor to me as well.

      In addition, when he said Microsoft was 'good' at fending off the competition, I thought he was making a subtle understatement joke - because saying Microsoft is 'good' at fending off the competition is about like saying Al Capone was 'good' at running a business.

    3. Re:Sarcasm by Nossie · · Score: 1

      my opinion of this guy is one word... shill

      but one thing I will say is that GNU/Linux could really do with some decent marketing.

      you could drop the GNU for a start /hides

      Before I get modded down, I respect RMS and his work on the software he did over the last 20 years or so but that doesnt give him any excuse to try and put some childish in joke abrv into a software title. I don't want to call Linux the full OS, but that doesn't mean I can stand the alternative.

      Put GNU/linux and Madriva in the same boat and sink it.

    4. Re:Sarcasm by nfk · · Score: 1

      If I am reading it correctly, only the first phrase is by Zemlin. The part about marketing and fending off competition is from the article.

    5. Re:Sarcasm by Dada · · Score: 1

      I believe he's just being sarcastic There's Zemlin giving a talk at Linuxworld, and then there's some guy reporting about that talk on a news site. It's unclear which of the two is diluting the message with the ridiculous "marketing and fending off competition" bit, but it appears neither are joking anyway.

      So there is no sarcasm, some people really think that way.
    6. Re:Sarcasm by jimicus · · Score: 1

      Saying all Microsoft has ever done well is marketing and fending off competition is setting an example for not ridiculing them? I believe he's just being sarcastic.

      Certainly in terms of "stuff which they invented", he's on the nail. While they're good at taking existing products and running with them, real innovation is relatively unusual out of Redmond.

      However, Microsoft's success I think demonstrates rather nicely that marketing and fending off competition are perhaps more important than great software engineering.

    7. Re:Sarcasm by westlake · · Score: 1
      saying Microsoft is 'good' at fending off the competition is about like saying Al Capone was 'good' at running a business.

      Capone was good at running a business - a cartel. He had a classical Italian faith in a tightly organized and disciplined system. Those who kept to their assigned territories, and played by the rules, prospered.

  11. Respect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We don't respect someone because someone else asked us to.

    Respect has to be earned, not bought nor dictated nor "suggested".

  12. The difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is a pillar of civilization. Windows is just some OS that you can buy.

  13. Is this a joke? by toby · · Score: 1, Troll

    Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition

    Dear Mr Zemlin,

    You don't have to market a product that sits at 95%+ market share.

    All you have to do is continue the dirty tricks (legal and otherwise) that got it there, and keep it there. I don't respect criminals, thugs and liars, and I think you should resign for suggesting that the open source community should do so.

    Yours sincerely

    --
    you had me at #!
    1. Re:Is this a joke? by Joebert · · Score: 1

      Takes one to know one. :)

      --
      Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
    2. Re:Is this a joke? by ProdigySim · · Score: 0

      Mr. Zemlin didn't make that quote. Note the lack of quotation marks. That's just commentary put in the writeup by whoever submitted it. And frankly, it's very misleading. This isn't the only modded-up comment on that line. It _IS_ a joke

  14. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Carthag · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nah the summary states that Microsoft and Windows will form a duopoly. Sounds about right. :(

  15. No thanks by pembo13 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft operates in the real world - in the real world I only give respect to those who have earned my respect, or who have it by default and have done nothing to lost it; Microsoft fits neither of these to me.

    --
    "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    1. Re:No thanks by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

      Has anyone who has ever sold a product earned your respect? Well, probably, but the fact is, almost all players in all markets don't earn peoples' respects to get sales. They're going to be around anyway. Why make ourselves look stupid in any way because of that? Just go about our business and make our empire stronger. Learn from others where we can. Get in where you fit in. Be an opportunist, but don't sacrifice our goals and ideals. None of that has to do with MS, so don't worry about them. Let's just get what we can from them to make us stronger. Don't you think that's what they're doing to everyone else? But we don't have to make ourselves look stupid doing it.

    2. Re:No thanks by westlake · · Score: 1
      Microsoft operates in the real world

      Precisely.

      The real world in which Microsoft saw a record $51 billion in revenues in its last fiscal year.

      The real world in which the Windows OS is approaching one billion users on the desktop. 90% of the 124 million PCs in China. Where pirated Windows outsells Linux on the streets.

      The real world in which public support for the anti-trust break-up of Microsoft never approached critical mass.

      The real world in which Vista [which had zero visibility in January] runs head-to-head with Linux in OS Platform Statistics.

    3. Re:No thanks by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      But what does all that have to do with respect?

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
  16. Some things Windows does pretty well by Sergeant+Pepper · · Score: 1, Funny

    Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.

    Too bad that's the only thing!

  17. Marketing Strategy by Blobule · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Microsoft's marketing strategy is actually quite simple. It follows the triple E system. Embrace, Extend, Exterminate. It also has another strategy is the triple B system. Buy Out, Bloat Up, and Bilk.

  18. Not just that. by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You should also respect them for publicly claiming that Linux "violates" X patents owned by Microsoft.

    And that anyone using Linux (unless specially licensed) owes Microsoft some money.

    And for Microsoft's continuing attempts to kill / marginalize the ODF standard.

    Yes, Microsoft deserves your respect and not your disgust. So says an executive from a company that has purchased a "partnership" with Microsoft.

    1. Re:Not just that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      When it comes down to it, I don't really think I disrespect Microsoft. I might dislike Microsoft...

    2. Re:Not just that. by AusIV · · Score: 1

      You should also respect them for publicly claiming that Linux "violates" X patents owned by Microsoft.


      And that anyone using Linux (unless specially licensed) owes Microsoft some money.


      And for Microsoft's continuing attempts to kill / marginalize the ODF standard.


      Yes, Microsoft deserves your respect and not your disgust. So says an executive from a company that has purchased a "partnership" with Microsoft.


      Exactly. I can accept that Microsoft doesn't have to fail for Linux to succeed, but I'm not going to respect Microsoft so long as they're not playing fair.


      I will begin to respect Microsoft when they: stop making specious claims of patent violations (or making other claims that Linux users owe them), stop using their monopoly to break established standards and create their own proprietary standards (furthering their monopoly), and stop abusing the legal system so they can keep a wide user base without putting their time into developing a solid operating system.


      I won't really respect Microsoft until they start treating their users as their customers rather than criminals. Their activation system is disrespectful to their customers and a pain for honest computer users. The DRM they've pushed forward also treats honest users as criminals.


      In short, I'll stop complaining about Microsoft when they accept the competition and allow Linux to exist without paying them for "protection". I will respect Microsoft when they start earning their customers honestly.

  19. Server & desktop - different levels of ridicul by pyite69 · · Score: 1

    I have given up ridiculing people who run Windows on their workstations, basically along the lines of what this guy says. However, it is completely ridiculous to ever run Windows on a server.

  20. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Henriok · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah. I read it on the Internet so it must be true!

    --

    - Henrik

    - when the Shadows descend -
  21. "There are some things Windows does pretty well" by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition."

    Thos are not things Windows does well. Those are things Microsoft's marketing and legal arms do well. So, if I want to sell something, or crush people who are selling something that competes with what I'm selling, great, Microsoft is the place to be. On the other hand, if I want to, you know, run my computer, I want a good operating system, not a good salesman.

    --
    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  22. The Linux Foundation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The members of the Linux Foundation are mostly big companies. One would expect it to identify with business more than the 'enthusiast' community.

    Businesses don't usually snipe at each other and do usually treat each other with respect. In that light, it is not surprising that the public face of the foundation calls for the community to respect Microsoft. I, for one will follow his lead. Microsoft is due the respect we reserve for any other convicted criminal.

  23. For better or worse... by QunaLop · · Score: 0

    Whether or not you detest Microsoft, you have to realize the billions of dollars and man hours they have contributed to the industry. Even if some of that was done 'unfairly'.

    1. Re:For better or worse... by Nossie · · Score: 1

      billions of dollars and man hours contributed to the office 2007 bar?

      woah thats a lot of innovation.

    2. Re:For better or worse... by DECS · · Score: 1

      Mostly for worse. MS has made contributions to lots of things, including WebDAV and (IIRC) inventing the basis of AJAX for Outlook Web Access.

      However, most of what Microsoft has "contributed" comes from two poisoned buckets:

      The Give: APIs, DRM systems, file formats and other ideas floated in order to prevent / erect barriers to competition.

      The Take: FAT, NTFS, SMB, and other protocols and conventions that the world has standardized upon (or hopes to), all of which involve patent risk.

      All companies exist to make money. However, other companies make great products, and increasingly, share their contributions to the community, simply because its in their best interests to participate in a market competing in implementations, not competing in formats.

      If you compare shared contributions of other companies, MS doesn't look so sharing at all:

      Apple - supports BSD and KHTML, opened its core OS and various projects.
      Sun - opened its Solaris, Java, and SPARC.
      IBM - supported Linux development.
      Novell - supports SuSE development.

      What has Microsoft ever shared? At a time when it owned the PC desktop 1987-1997, not only did it deliver products of very poor quality, but it really didn't share anything. It got paid for putting out software that was mostly developed by others. Little excellent work, huge profits, garbage for consumers.

      Microsoft doesn't deserve respect, it needs to work on earning it.

      -
      Microsoft's Yellow Road to Cairo

  24. Microsoft decline by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

    In effect Microsoft has only been on the radar for the average computer user for 10-15 years. The decline of Microsoft is starting, it's not a decline in profits or user base. But the realisation by many people that they are sick of the Microsoft lock-in.

    Microsoft is desperate to branch out into other markets and in doing so their core products suffer.

    People arent prepared to pay hundreds of dollars for Office anymore.

    Their planning and project management for Vista was seriously flawed and the product has not sold well.

  25. Uh huh... by RyanFenton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's akin to telling the viewers of Fox News that it's important to "stop making fun of liberals, because they've here to stay, and they've made important contributions to the progress of the world at large".

    No matter how important a role some group plays towards making something else important work, the nature of humans and comedy are going to have everyone and everything important to everyone mocked constantly. And no matter how bad that paints a picture of the large groups who mock other groups as part of that process - people are going to be mocking eachother as long as mental associations can be made.

    The message behind this suggestion seems to be more a message to "act more professional people, you're making us look like bozos". Yes... it's nice to imagine sometimes that a loose community of groups and individuals didn't have to act exactly like the kind of human grouping it is. But we are humans, and Windows IS fun to make fun of, and most of us say that as Windows users.

    Yes, Windows has contributed much for everyday users of computers - it has made many things possible that may not have been possible otherwise, and it will continue to be the best path towards many kinds of progress for the everyday use of computers going forward for the immediately foreseeable future... but it's still contains an endless variety of deep flaws that both mock the underlying nature (DRM motivations, artificially segmenting functionality for legal/marketing needs) of the software, and the human nature that lies behind these things, and our reaction to them.

    Ryan Fenton

    1. Re:Uh huh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, Windows has contributed much for everyday users of computers - it has made many things possible that may not have been possible otherwise, and it will continue to be the best path towards many kinds of progress for the everyday use of computers going forward for the immediately foreseeable future.

      Bollocks.

    2. Re:Uh huh... by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

      Comedy, mocking, satire, derision, etc. all have their place, but they look better coming from the peanut gallery than they do from the OSS community, who turns around and demands respect for their efforts. We should at least be as respectful to everyone as we want them to be respectful towards us.

      We don't have to do the mocking, why take the easy target? Anyone else can (and will, easily without our help) do that. Do you doubt it? All we have to do is put our cards down, our money where our mouth is, etc, and everyone else will be able to see who's bluffing and who isn't.

    3. Re:Uh huh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Addressing your comment to FN viewers would be the wrong thing to do. We expect the viewer of Fox News to have very crude political thoughts, he's an end user and his ability to compromise, think logically, or participate in debate constructively doesn't really matter - because his actual participation in the political process doesn't really matter.

      Even the dumbest, rudest, most partisan hack you can think of *has* to respect the liberals enough to talk with them - that's his job.

  26. not the tech by ardor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well much of their legacy tech is crap (see WinAPI). But .Net, DirectX, Visual Studio are excellent projects. So, I have no problem with MS tech. I do have a problem with their attitude towards others (that is, crush them and grab every single dollar in the market). MS got unpopular because of their actions, not their tech.

    --
    This sig does not contain any SCO code.
  27. Respect? Yeah, like I respect... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Al Capone.

    Microsoft will become the arch type 'Evil Empire' mafia structure in Hollywood films for roughly the first half of this century. A company that did not contribute any functionality to the legacy of mankind and predated on software companies, extorting end users through elaborate schemes cannot be considered as anything else.

  28. Thier marketing sucks lately by GregPK · · Score: 1

    Seriously, marketing the current operating system good???? If you want to market your product you need to make the whole organization from the field reps to the CEO, feel an internal respect for the product you are selling. Before I left I most certainly didn't feel that. Heck, the consistent cracks about Vista and other Microsoft related products was rather endless. Not to mention a tidelike flow of people leaving for jobs at other companies like Apple, Google, Netflix, ect. It's like the people in charge are really smart but have no idea of how to market a product. They need to go back to the basics again, rebuild thier marketing program. Don't use it to push defective products like Vista for the corporate suites ambitions show and glitz. Use it to push products within the Microsoft unbrella that currently work well. Also, use it to push for charities that would connect it to the very consumers that wouldn't otherwise buy the product.

    It's a sad day in age when you can't even where a shirt that says Windows Vista in public without getting a "Vista sucks" comment. Hell, the people in IT at my new company nearly shot me for wearing that shirt one day. Microsoft's next release better be, AMAZING!!! Because, they have a lot of ground to makeup in IT departments, and companies everywhere.

  29. Getting along with Microsoft by monkeyengineered · · Score: 1

    I agree with the sentiment of getting along with Microsoft, I use XP at work, mostly because it came on the computer, but most importantly because we use Autodesk Inventor which only supports windows, our Servers were Unix for years till the supplying company dropped it for Windows Server, again not our choice. I don't think Windows is going away, mostly because of Business interests and supported software. I don't have much trouble with XP, I don't download viruses or crapware, I keep up to date on patches, so I don't have the trouble that most people complain about, my computer doesn't crash all the time, Inventor crashes, but it's picky about hardware. all that being said I use Ubuntu on my personal computer at home, I love it, but for a guy without internet access, it can be irritating sometimes.

  30. The reasons I ridicule MS... by DarkDust · · Score: 1

    ... are technical. There ARE things MS does well, even technically, but sometimes it's just astonishing how bad the Windows design is. Vista now made that gap to UN*X systems (including Mac OS X) smaller (e.g. symlinks) or even surpassed it (I consider the MS PowerShell to be technically superior to what we have on UN*X systems). But it still amuses me that with all the money, all the people MS has, their OS is still not far ahead of the competition. And if you know the history of MS, the reason for their dominance is ALSO (not purely) a lot of luck: they were in the right place at the right time, but I think it could all have turned out totally different. Nobody would know MicroSoft today if IBM would have used CP/M on the IBM PC, or if the MS guys wouldn't have known QDOS/86-DOS.

  31. and then they will sue OSS out of existence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they are already trying to claim they own a bunch of intellectual property in linux, and will eventually sue anyone who doesnt pay them protection money.

    i also have respect for the mafia, they do a wonderful job of collecting garbage. its just the random murders that bother me.

  32. Re:I thought OS X Linux by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1, Funny

    Open source vendors have to recognize that Windows is here to stay and that together with Microsoft it will form a duopoly in the market for operating systems. This also requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it.

    How can I put this eloquently...

    Fuck off, Uncle Tom.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  33. Fire Him A.S.A.P. by Delifisek · · Score: 1

    Linux community does not respect anything than better code...

    --
    [My english is better than most other people's Turkish, so please point out mistakes politely. Thank you.]
  34. Ridicule? No. Respect? No. by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

    this also requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it
    I do not really care to ridicule this corporation, although they can be ridiculed for many things. However, I do not respect the company, because of their methods to screw over everyone that is not them. Respect is earned, not demanded. I have no reason to respect the technological side of their products either, as I don't really think that without them the field of computing would have been worse off. Quite the contrary, in fact.
    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
  35. I had to check my calendar by Skapare · · Score: 1

    Reading the title on this I had to check my calendar since I got the impression this might be the first day of the first full month of spring. But no, it is still the hot dog days of summer.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  36. Respect is earnt. by miffo.swe · · Score: 1, Informative

    And i cant think of ONE single puny nice little thing that Microsoft has done for Linux. I can oth think of pretty many things Microsoft has done to kill or stifle Linux. If Microsoft has earnt anything its respect in the sense you dont turn your back against a raving pitbull.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
    1. Re:Respect is earnt. by Conor+Turton · · Score: 0

      And i cant think of ONE single puny nice little thing that Microsoft has done for Linux. Then you're fucking stupid. Without 98 and definitely XP, PC use in the home wouldn't be as widespread as it is now and you'd have sod all chance of getting Linux on the desktop because, as with IBM back in the 80's, nobody ever got fired for installing Windows.
      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    2. Re:Respect is earnt. by Nossie · · Score: 1

      I hate to say this....

      "PC use in the home wouldn't be as widespread as it is now"

      but maybe that wouldn't be such a bad thing?

      only sayin!

    3. Re:Respect is earnt. by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      Maybe we would have had PCs that WORK fro a change? And lets not forget OS/2, AmigaOS, BeOS, CP/M, AtariOS, QNX and all the other who would have been able to fill the void with no problems at all. Dos and later Windows was the worst most idiotic OS of them all, id say we would be much better off without them. The PC got widespred because in the 80s a IBM was forced to let other companies make clones because they was under heavy fire for monopoly accustations.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    4. Re:Respect is earnt. by Tony · · Score: 1

      Then you're fucking stupid. Without 98 and definitely XP, PC use in the home wouldn't be as widespread as it is now and you'd have sod all chance of getting Linux on the desktop because, as with IBM back in the 80's, nobody ever got fired for installing Windows.

      Bullshit.

      Microsoft did not create the personal computer wave. They merely rode the wave better than anyone else. Computers would be different now without Microsoft, that's true. I suspect they'd be better, but I can't prove it.

      But, let me repeat one more time, in case you are hard of hearing, or just don't grasp cause and effect: Microsoft did not cause widespread use of computers. They were simply in the right place at the right time, and were ruthless enough to destroy competition at any cost.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  37. I'll start respecting Microsoft.... by kazade84 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    when they start respecting Open Source and Open Standards.

  38. Sorry no can do by unity100 · · Score: 1

    After all the pain they made us go through since windows 95, i cant stop poking fun at them. Thats the only way to withstand.

    If i had stopped poking fun, the alternative would be to strangle whatever microsoft representatives i could find. Id rather poke fun.

  39. Some things Windows does pretty well ... by Skapare · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    ... like keeping me from controlling the computer I own, bought, and paid for (and built with my very own hands and tools from a few boards and parts).

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  40. Makes good sense to me by Torodung · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I too would respect the 400 lb. gorilla, though mostly by keeping my distance.

    He's absolutely right on other points as well. If Linux rises to desktop prominence, against a competitor that has a 95% market share on the desktop (a practical monopoly), then the next logical step must be a duopoly, and it is doubtful that Microsoft will ever "go away." They will likely change the way they do business, like IBM did. Perhaps they will produce their own "open source" products, and then the Linux/FOSS community had better be ready for it, because they certainly won't be free software.

    Expect it.

    They've already proven the first axiom of business. Courts are the slowest moving thing on the planet. Business decisions will always outpace court decisions. That's how they got away with their illegal actions to slaughter STAC and Netscape. It didn't matter by the time the courts had decided. That's how Microsoft managed to pen a patent agreement with Novell, who won the MS-funded patent case against SCO, before the SCO case was even over. Did anyone notice that?

    They're moving faster than anyone can litigate. Being right is not good enough here. You have to be right, clever, and decisive. If you can be ethical too, good for you, but ethical doesn't tend to work against an unethical opponent. Try winning a fair fight against a guy who is willing to kick you in the crotch and throw sand in your face some time.

    Developers had better keep a careful eye on this gorilla, or you're going to end up working for him. Respect the gorilla.

    --
    Toro

    1. Re:Makes good sense to me by Nossie · · Score: 1

      "They will likely change the way they do business, like IBM did. Perhaps they will produce their own "open source" products, and then the Linux/FOSS community had better be ready for it, because they certainly won't be free software."

      you mean like this?

      http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=41395

    2. Re:Makes good sense to me by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Well, more importantly, like this...

      Open Source At Microsoft

      But it's just a bunch of marketing and lip service at this point. There are no major open source products at MS, MS's pundits are still ridiculing FOSS as "open sourcery," and you can bet Microsoft's intent is to produce yet more restricted license software. You'll notice that they've concentrated exclusively on the "openness" of the source code, yet ignore the entire concept of GPL and free software in their stance on intellectual property. It's playing both ends against the middle right now, largely through innuendo, something MS is very good at.

      In fact, Microsoft has killed entire markets by simply pretending to have a product. It's something to watch out for, as this is a bread-and-butter tactic in Redmond.

      --
      Toro

    3. Re:Makes good sense to me by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      If Linux rises to desktop prominence, against a competitor that has a 95% market share on the desktop (a practical monopoly), then the next logical step must be a duopoly

      I respectfully disagree.

      I don't think the market is really big enough to support more than one platform, unless we, as developers, get REALLY good at crossplatform. Which is going to happen one of two ways: Either the two platform will become similar enough that something like POSIX can be created, making them essentially one platform, or something like Java/wxwidgets/QT (or even AJAX, god forbid) will rise -- a "cross-platform platform" -- again, making it essentially one platform.

      That's assuming it doesn't completely flip the other way -- 95% Linux / 5% Microsoft -- which has happened before.

      it is doubtful that Microsoft will ever "go away." They will likely change the way they do business, like IBM did.

      Well, if they did what IBM did, I don't think I'd mind.

      That is, IBM used to have a hardware monopoly. They stupidly gave that up by signing a deal with Microsoft, so that Microsoft had a software monopoly, and IBM's hardware became commodity. IBM had to move into a completely different market, even though I believe they still sell something resembling a desktop computer, if they haven't spun it off into a separate company.

      That would be like my cross-platform-platform example above -- for example, if Java became THE platform to develop for, OS really would be irrelevant. Some would continue to buy Microsoft, and almost no one would switch overnight just cause they can, but many would, when looking at their upgrade options, consider saving a few bucks by buying a new computer with Linux instead of Windows, since most of their old stuff will work.

      Or, if you look a few years later, IBM sort of tried and failed with OS/2.

      But take another look at Microsoft -- they've done this themselves, sort of. I wonder what Apple's marketshare was at the time? Probably close to 100%, right? Microsoft made something so much cheaper, even if it sucked, that it completely flipped around, and it did so very quickly. And at the time, the Mac sucked almost as much anyway, so it was really a pissing contest to say who was better.

      We could do the same thing now, but I think Microsoft may be too smart to let us get away with it entirely. Still, there's a chance -- for example, a $200 or $300 laptop with Linux on it. No one's going to pay an extra $100 to put Vista on it, and many people are just going to buy a laptop, plug it in, and see if they like it the way it is before they install another (even pirated) OS onto it.

      It also creates an entirely new market -- the disposable laptop. Take it anywhere you feel like carrying it (it's 3 lbs), and don't baby it -- even if you break one every year or two, so what? You can buy a newer, better one.

      Try winning a fair fight against a guy who is willing to kick you in the crotch and throw sand in your face some time.

      In such a fight, once he has done those things, it's no longer a fair fight, and I'm free to do the same. And I probably can win, because if I got into that fight in the first place, the guy I'm fighting probably isn't as creative as I can be with ways to "cheat".

      The question isn't what I'm willing to do, or what the other guy's willing to do, but rather, what are the rules? Who makes them? Who enforces them?

      If the ref's just lazy, then we'll both kick sand in each other's faces, then blindly fumble to kick at each other's crotches...

      If the ref's fair, then the second he kicks me and throws sand in his face, the whole crowd watching descends on him and kicks the shit out of him. I sit back and watch -- or not, I'm still screaming and trying to get sand out of my eyes, but I still call it a win.

      If this fight is being reffed by a bunch of guys from the same gang as the guy throwing sand in my face, I should probably run. That's the situation right now -- Microsoft donates to campaigns, politicians write legislation for Microsoft... and so on. Best bet is to stay as far away as you can.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  41. Translation: by morari · · Score: 2, Funny

    Microsoft will never go away, so bend over, pass the Vaseline, and enjoy! Linux can coexist, but more so as foreplay.

    --
    "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
  42. Paging Dr. Freud? by overshoot · · Score: 1

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'

    So on the subject of "what MSWindows does well," the best examples he can come up with are:

    • Marketing, and
    • fending off competition
    How's that different from the critics saying that:
    • MSWindows is a marketing tool that
    • is designed to block other market entrants?

    He wants them to change their tune, so since the message is the same I guess he just wants us to have the same admiration for software-as-ad-medium and market foreclosure that he does.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  43. Indistinguishable from sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"


    Other things Microsoft got right about Windows; they now have a patented sudo work-a-like. Will their innovation never cease?
  44. I wonder by no-body · · Score: 1
    if there was some of the - what was it? 50 or so Billion $ of cash reserves skimmed off folks - involved?


    And - yess, it's all success.....

  45. two kinds of respect by adrianmonk · · Score: 1

    There are two kinds of respect at play here: respect for their abilities, and respect for the intentions.

    I would argue that they are deserving of some of the first kind of respect. Not necessarily respect for their technical abilities in most areas (although they've done a few worthwhile technical things), but their overall ability to sell stuff and make a product successful. Whether their methods are good or not, there have been lots of other companies with big monopolies who sat on their ass and lost it. Microsoft is tenacious and doesn't seem to be doing that. And they strategize fairly well (except when they don't).

    Then the second kind of respect, I think most of us agree, is not something Microsoft deserves. They aren't trying to be good citizens, and they aren't even trying to make a particularly product from a technical (or even ergonomic) point of view. When it comes to designing things that work, Microsoft is very much about doing the minimum. This is especially annoying given their position as one of a few industry leaders (in the sense that people follow them, not that they lead well).

    So anyway, the disagreement about whether Microsoft deserves respect might be a problem with terminology. I think most people agree that Microsoft deserves one kind of respect but not so much with the other kind.

  46. Commentator asks rebels to respect the empire by gnarlin · · Score: 1

    After all, they are here to stay and the sooner the rebel leaders accepts this
    the sooner the rebels can learn to live with the empire and not to fight against it.

    --
    A bad analogy is like a leaky screwdriver.
    1. Re:Commentator asks rebels to respect the empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All empires eventually fall and Microsoft is going to fall fast and flat on it's face in the same time it took to actually become an empire.

      I don't know much about businesses, but I know this much:
      The more market share a product gains, the faster it will grow, and the faster it grows the more market share it gains and the faster it continues to grow rising year over year. I dunno if that I explained it right but I figure you get the idea and probably know it already (and Firefox serves as a great example).

      Anyways, Apple (particularly it's laptops) are growing faster then the rest of the industry (Linux is probably growing about as fast as well, I'm not sure) so that guy is an idiot for suggesting a duopoly with Linux and Windows (as well as suggesting I should respect an entity that makes shoddy products), and a "triopoly" is redundant. If anything competition will finally return to the marketplace instead of a half dozen big name PC makers and most of the small guys "recommending" Windows Vista.

      Sebastian

  47. That guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sounds like a Microsoft shill. Seriously he thinks that illegally becoming a monopoly and flooding the market with retarded advertising makes them a great company? He needs to be beat with the clue stick.

    Amazingly the captcha is "resigned". Hopefully we'll read about this yahoos resignation in a few days.

  48. Depends on what you mean... by neapolitan · · Score: 1

    I hate to resort to definitions, but from Merriam-Webster:

    >respect
    > Etymology:
    > Middle English, from Latin respectus, literally, act of looking back, from respicere to look back, regard, from
    > re- + specere to look -- more at spy
    >Date:
    > 14th century
    >
    >1: a relation or reference to a particular thing or situation 2: an act of giving particular attention : consideration
    >3 a: high or special regard : esteem
    > b: the quality or state of being esteemed cplural : expressions of respect or deference
    >4: particular, detail

    Certainly Linux should respect Microsoft by definition 2, as with any strong contender. Zemlin does not appear to use definition 3, which is often what people mean by "respect" in popular usage. I think we could all agree with that.

    --
    Slashdotter, ID #101. UIDs are in binary, right?
    1. Re:Depends on what you mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From all the posts on slashdot, we give M$ a lot of respect by all definitions. We need to rate articles too, and this one gets "-1 Troll."

  49. Re:Active Directory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, trolls these days just aren't what they used to be.

  50. You know I was just thinking this? by Simon+Carr · · Score: 1
    I'm tiring of fanboyism from every camp, Linux, BSD, Mac, Windows, Sun, all of them. I'm instituting an oath of "Computer Secularism".

    This sounds funny, but really the only way computers are going to get better is if we praise and are critical of the best and worst of ALL offerings. Not just sticking to whatever platform we happen to check our mail on at the time.

    I use every one (except for Sun, but my current job doesn't require it), and I have to be honest, they all have strengths and weaknesses that are notable. I even secretly think some of Vista's features are neat.

    --
    -- The unsig...
  51. Re:Server & desktop - different levels of ridi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "However, it is completely ridiculous to ever run Windows on a server." - by pyite69 (463042) on Saturday August 11, @01:37PM (#20196457)

    http://www.microsoft.com/sql/bigdata/default.mspx

    There are HOW MANY COMPANIES running Microsoft Windows (of modern NT-based varieties today (2000/XP/Server 2003/VISTA) + SQLServer 2003 on that page, & doing so successfully mind you, that will tend to disagree with you?

    Quite a lot!

    Guys, I KNOW you guys "love your LINUX" here @ /., but - don't underestimate Windows used in servers, OR for security either!

    Windows of modern builds based on NT (2000/XP/Server2003/VISTA)? They're VERY securable as well, above & beyond their default configuration "out-of-the-box/oem stock"...

    Really easily as well, via 12 basic simple steps anyone can use (inclusive of Windows admins, & at the DESKTOP CLIENT NODE LEVELS as well as on the server), per this guide:

    http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?s=731 6c98c36e75835f964972f246c3eaf&p=375355#post375355

    SCORE ON THE MULTIPLATFORM CIS TOOL (by the CENTER FOR INTERNET SECURITY) PHOTO:

    http://img.techpowerup.org/070618/APK14SecurityPoi ntsCISToolResult84735.jpg

    This multiplatform test runs on SOLARIS, BSD variants (sorry, no OpenBSD or MacOS X versions are available yet, but for example: FreeBSD has a version), Linux, & yes, Windows & has been noted by SANS & other notables/respectable sources, such as these:

    COMPUTERWORLD:

    http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?com mand=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9018362&intsrc=hm_ list

    SANS: CIS to Release Windows Configuration Assessment Tool (May 1, 2007)

    http://www.sans.org/newsletters/newsbites/newsbite s.php?vol=9&issue=36#sID302

    (That's there for folks that have tried to "object to this program" because they did not know who "THE CENTER FOR INTERNET SECURITY" is, & attempted to say this program is "rogueware" etc. such as in the URL below):

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=264303&thresho ld=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=20176577#20185 057

    The sad part is this - I have posted the challenge to take this test (especially from SeLINUX bearing distros & users of them, & BSD variant users like FreeBSD) here @ /., around 25 times now - NO TAKERS, but plenty of evaders & spinmasters trying to avoid taking it, for b.s. reasons (saying in others, vs. the URL above's reason, that "there is no registry in LINUX"... & so what? There are other areas in the *NIX family tree that DO (such as the /etc & its subnodes)).

    APK

    P.S.=> And, don't get me wrong: I like Linux, especially on KUbuntu 7.1, because I LIKE KDE!

    (AND, with SeLinux in place + configured on it ontop of the usual methods for helping to secure Linux (chmod/chroot/chown legwork + IPTables (perhaps Packet Filtering built into Linux as well via IPChains oldschool methods (but they BOTH offer things over one another), & even NetConfig to create a "NAT" system too - plus more things I am learning about for security in LINUX that are pretty neat)!

    I did that CIS Tool multiplatform test in the URL above

  52. The same Jim Zemlin??? by alephnul · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wonder what happened in between this article http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/may 2007/tc20070525_325967.htm and today's comment.

    Can you say "Big chunk of Microsoft change in Zemlins pocket"? I can.http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content /may2007/tc20070525_325967.htm

    --
    I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves. - August Strindberg
  53. really? by onegear · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Jim Zemlin (executive director for the Linux Foundation) gave a talk at LinuxWorld saying that the open source community should stop poking fun at Microsoft."

    really??? how about MS stop lying about Linux and stop putting small companies out of business.

  54. Re:I thought OS X Linux by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


    Nicely used reference.

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  55. Respect? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Paying respect to MS for using shady tactics, FUD and intimidation to gain their market position is like paying respect to a malware distributor for controling a million botnets. Yes, it ain't easy. But nothing that would be remotely praiseworthy.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  56. excelled in marketing by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    That is about it too, aside from excelling in steaing what they eventually market well.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  57. I have two words for you this "linux community"... by Ferret55 · · Score: 1

    "requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it" Respect microsoft? after it litigates through a proxy (SCO), threatens via patent litigation, disavows the gpl v3 license, astroturfs, tries to subvert the OOXML standardisation process and DRMs everything (not to mention locking up its own software) so that the CIA has a hard time getting its hands on its "trade secrets"? Is this the company you want me to respect? I have two words to deliver to this so-called "linux community" the first word starts with "get" and end with "-ed!". This time Microsoft gets to dance to our tune. And believe me, Microsoft is going to give a whole new definition to the word "flexible".

  58. Worse, actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're discounting the value of progress they have impeded, the large amount of intellectual property that was not developed for fear of MS "acquiring" it (in the "Stacker" way) or making it deliberately malfunction (in the "Caldera" way), the damage to the industry by impeding natural competition (multiple convictions) and, of course, the gargantuan rip-off that is MS licensing where a company could not use the licenses that came with the equipment when they worked from a standard build, and the loss of many fine products because after acquisition they would, of course never be made available on a platform that simply works (think Visio).

    Add to that the many, many , MANY hours lost to industry as a result of the incredible inefficiency by which the products worked and work (try graphics under any other OS), the damage caused to the music market by their DRM and the privacy risks their software creates ad infinitum and you might come to the conclusion that I would disagree with you.

    And in /that/ you'd be correct..

  59. Nice ways to put it by Zoko+Siman · · Score: 1

    Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"
    Marketing? Once you are the monopoly you don't have to do all that much work. Add on that mac OS was pretty shitty before 10 and you can see how MS got so much market. Fending off competition? Yeah, I remember a story about that, I think they either bought their competition with their monopoly-money, or sued them to ruin.
  60. There are reasons... by HalAtWork · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are reasons to respect Microsoft, but it's not because of their marketing or the quality of their software.

    One should respect MS as a relationship with MS could be compared to a relationship with any other vendor.

    A typical non-OSS user won't exactly be enchanted if they see the OSS community treating another company like degenerates. They don't know the difference between MS and any other company, all they see is OSS devs/users treating a company like crap. If you take a one-sided view, that makes OSS devs/users look bad. That's probably the only view they'll be taking since they haven't worshipped at the church of FLOSS.

    If you look at the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King encouraged all to be non-violent, not carry weapons, and not give any excuse for others to even mistake them for wanting to possibly even slightly exhibit any negative behaviour or thoughts. That's to take any power away from the enemy, as they can't say anything if there's nothing for them to point out.

    Another reason is that truth can come from anywhere, and a good argument will stand no matter who makes it. If we simply expect everything out of MS to be garbage, then we will also miss any jewels, and that's just hurting ourselves.

    Anyway look. Bottom line is to be better than MS, we can't let ourselves go by saying "Oh, well, MS fucks up, we can too, just not as bad." That's pretty asinine. Nope. To be better than MS, we have to actually be better than them, not stoop just as low as them.

    1. Re:There are reasons... by pallmall1 · · Score: 1

      If you look at the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King encouraged all to be non-violent, not carry weapons, and not give any excuse for others to even mistake them for wanting to possibly even slightly exhibit any negative behaviour or thoughts.
      Did he ask people to respect the Klan?
      --
      3 things about computers: they're alive, they're self-aware, and they hate your guts.
    2. Re:There are reasons... by wwahammy · · Score: 1

      No matter whether you like Microsoft or not, they're not the Klan.

    3. Re:There are reasons... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you look at the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King encouraged all to be non-violent, not carry weapons, and not give any excuse for others to even mistake them for wanting to possibly even slightly exhibit any negative behaviour or thoughts.
      He was only fortunate to have an actual good cause behind him. Chances are he'd be all the whore today that Jesse Jackson is, exploiting "white guilt" for money.
    4. Re:There are reasons... by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

      He never advocated disrespect for anyone. He asked people to try to understand their perspective so as to see what causes their hatred, and to see how not to succumb to the same thing by retaliation against them. He asked people to realize that everyone needs to learn from each other in order to get along. He taught that anger and hatred do not fuel peace and understanding.

    5. Re:There are reasons... by pallmall1 · · Score: 1

      No matter whether you like Microsoft or not, they're not the Klan.
      Zemlin's not Martin Luther King, either.
      --
      3 things about computers: they're alive, they're self-aware, and they hate your guts.
    6. Re:There are reasons... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huhuhu ga-hyuck! Agreed braw! Whitizm! Back to ass-fucking pigs in the woods!

  61. Is fear close enough to respect for you? by HiThere · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I can't respect Microsoft. They are immoral, unethical, criminal, etc.

    There may, indeed, be something good that one can say about them. The closest I can come is "They made a good mouse." That's not sufficient basis for respecting them.

    Making fun of them? Of course. I'm afraid, and I don't intend to yield, so what else should I do? Cry?

    So I cheer the victories of almost anyone against MS. And I especially cheer the victories of "the home team". And I shrug off the victories of MS. I must. Depression is bad for you.

    MS, it's not just a disease, it's an operating system.

    OK, that was in bad taste. And not original. It's the best I could do on the spur of the moment.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    1. Re:Is fear close enough to respect for you? by swokm · · Score: 2, Funny

      I can't respect Microsoft. They are immoral, unethical, criminal, etc. There may, indeed, be something good that one can say about them. The closest I can come is "They made a good mouse." I think what you said is completely unfair. They also made a good keyboard.
  62. I've been saying this forever. by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Linux geeks should just treat Microsoft the way the Chinese government treats the US Government... a necessary enemy. Only there as a stepping stone to sovereignty or self sufficiency. Let them tout themselves, let them think they're winning, and then, when the chips are down, yank the last card from their house of cards... and watch them fall.

    Sun Tzu was right though, you can either wean yourself off the enemy and create your own destiny, or you can destroy Darth Vader and take his place at the Emperor's side. Either you choose a side, or you don't play their game. Most Linux geeks have chosen a side, and will eventually find themselves in Darth Vader's shoes. It is inevitable when one takes the path of confrontation. One monster must be created to oppose the existing one, unless the wise man fends off the monster and lets it die of its own irrelevance.

    --
    " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
    1. Re:I've been saying this forever. by IBBoard · · Score: 1

      Sun Tzu was right though, you can either wean yourself off the enemy and create your own destiny, or you can destroy Darth Vader and take his place at the Emperor's side.

      Wow, not only was Sun Tzu a master tactician (or at least the author of the tactical text of his era) but he was also a psychic who could see in to at least the 1970s and predict the existence of someone called "Darth Vader" who was evil and had a place at the Emperor's side! That guy doesn't have enough respect.
    2. Re:I've been saying this forever. by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Yeah because a nation with an economy expanding at the rate of 9% a year who's expansion is the only think keeping civil unrest from toppling the government isn't going to experience a slowdown someday soon or anything.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    3. Re:I've been saying this forever. by Cathbard · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference between Linux and China. China is HUGE and owns enough US currency and bonds to bankrupt the US overnight. For Linux to be in the same position we'd have to buy most of microsoft's shares. China can tell the US to shove their laws, they don't apply to the Chinese people and there isn't a damn thing the US can do about it. The situation is rather different in the Linux/M$ situation. If we forgive M$ for their past transgressions and try to play nice M$ will attack and destroy like they've done to all their previous "friends".

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    4. Re:I've been saying this forever. by realdodgeman · · Score: 1

      In it's current form, Linux could never become Darth Vader. Open Source just doesn't work that way. If someone starts to play evil, somebody else will take over the code and use it for good. A good example is Novell. They have started their way down the "path to the dark side", then canonical comes along and plays nice, and grows at triple the speed.

    5. Re:I've been saying this forever. by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 1

      In typical slashdotter fashion, you missed the more subtle point I was making.

      And yet, the same way, China needs the USA's economy to stay stable to keep itself where it is (for now) the same thing is true for Linux, it needs users to keep the Linux servers running, and until enough converts simply wean OFF of Microsoft wares, Linux will depend on the Windows users to patronize websites and services running off Linux rigs. Even Linux desktop users are dependant on the massive numbers of easy to dupe Microsoft buyers to keep buying hardware and keep the costs down. (You don't think it was us geeks that drove the 3000.00 USD 386DX rigs down in price to 2000.00 USD for a top of the line dual CPU server with SLI videocards and 7 speaker surround? And all that in a period of massive currency inflation?)

      Linux itself is neutral, it cannot force a migration through either quality or price (quality is good, price is zilch) because a large installed base is VERY close minded. I know this, and I will stay with this, they say, and they do as they say. So until a breakthrough occurs, Linux itself is dependent on some other OS option being out there to keep the lusers hooked on consuming the internet services available off Linux, in order for the market itself to survive long enough for a breakthrough of some kind to occur.

      The same way, look for China to keep lending us money, which we'll use to keep buying things from them and waging pointless wars against helpless backwater countries, until eventually that breakthrough occurs. At that point, China will own us without collapsing itself. I suggest learning Mandarin or Cantonese long before that occurs.

      --
      " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
    6. Re:I've been saying this forever. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      "For Linux to be in the same position we'd have to buy most of microsoft's shares." Well, but it isn't as though China owns half of the bonds. In fact, Japan is holding about twice as much as China holds (and the UK is holding about half of what China holds).
      http://www.swivel.com/graphs/show/5050649

    7. Re:I've been saying this forever. by alienmole · · Score: 1

      You have it backwards. Bill Moyers likes to blather on about how the creative genius of George Lucas mined the archetypes of the classic hero myths, blah blah. But in fact, Lucas just copied it all from a little known ancient Chinese manuscript, Sun Tzu's "The Star of Wars".

    8. Re:I've been saying this forever. by Cathbard · · Score: 1

      Maybe so but China does own enough to destroy the US economy at a stroke. Perhaps the word "most" was poorly chosen but the argument is still valid. China have a huge stick to wave around as do others, as you correctly point out (how fragile is the US ecomony hey?). Where is the Linux stick? When M$ attack linux it's akin to Walmart attacking the Salvation Army so it generates a lot of justifiable animosity from the common folk - nobody likes a bully.

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    9. Re:I've been saying this forever. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sun Tzu downloaded Star Wars?

    10. Re:I've been saying this forever. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Agreed your argument is valid, I should have explicity lead with that.

  63. How much MONEY have they sunk into it? by khasim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Have you ever used XP or 2000? It's not "shitty".

    Yes they are. Here's why:

    #1. The registry. It's too fucking brittle AND it is constantly open by Windows AND it is not automatically replicated X times over Y days so you can recover when it does break. And it will, eventually, break.

    #2. Which is why Microsoft shops advocate the "Wipe & Reload" method of "support". It broke, don't spend time trying to fix it. Fixing it is not an option. Wipe it and reload the "base image" that your shop uses. Sure it will take 30 - 60 minutes, but even if you have to do that for a dozen machines a week, it's still faster than finding the real problems.

    #3. Viruses, trojans & worms. At least with Linux I can boot from a "Live CD" and chroot the local hard drive and check it / edit it to remove problems. WITHOUT losing all the data that the user has saved to it (see #2 above).

    #4. No packaging system (see Debian & Ubuntu). And don't start going on about how you can make a "package" in Windows. That just shows you don't know what you're talking about. In Windows ANY app can replace ANY file when you install it. Under a real package management system, each file is owned by one AND ONLY ONE package. That file is NOT replaced unless you upgrade/remove the package that owns it. (or choose "force" and know that you're probably fucking up your system)

    Some of the end-users prefer Windows. That's fine. It's personal choice. But it's still a "shitty" operating system based upon "shitty" decisions.
    1. Re:How much MONEY have they sunk into it? by david.given · · Score: 1

      #1. The registry.

      gconf is, basically, a registry. Yes, a better one, but it's still doing the same job in much the same way.

      #2. Which is why Microsoft shops advocate the "Wipe & Reload" method of "support". It broke, don't spend time trying to fix it.

      This is because it's easy. Fixing something requires diagnosing what went wrong in the first place. Frequently for simple machines, it's simply not worth doing --- the amount of effort involved is vastly greater than there would be in flattening the system and starting again. This applies to Linux, as well; cruft builds up in the corners, configurations get slightly broken, and after a while it's frequently easier to reinstall than to clean it out.

      #3. Viruses, trojans & worms. At least with Linux I can boot from a "Live CD" and chroot the local hard drive and check it / edit it to remove problems.

      Windows Live CD.

      #4. No packaging system (see Debian & Ubuntu).

      I'll give you that one. Of course, there's nothing stopping you running a Debian userland inside a colinux box...

    2. Re:How much MONEY have they sunk into it? by usrusr · · Score: 1

      > #1. The registry. It's too fucking brittle AND it is constantly open by Windows AND it is not
      > automatically replicated X times over Y days so you can recover when it does break.

      Google ERUNT. But you are absolutely right if you ask "WHY DID SOMETHING LIKE THIS NOT COME WITH THE SYSTEM???"

      --
      [i have an opinion and i am not afraid to use it]
    3. Re:How much MONEY have they sunk into it? by lukas84 · · Score: 1

      1.) Happens. Since XP. It's called "Recovery Points". It works very well.

      2.) You would probably do the same in an enterprise environment, even when running Linux. On a desktop, this is simply the more efficient way. The problems we have here are that Microsoft didn't force least privilege on users in the past. They're doing that now with Vista. That's good.

      3.) Can do that since XP. It's called Windows PE (or BartPE if it's a small shop). Now, Windows PE 2.0 is available for everyone to use.

      4.) Kinda agree. MSI isn't that bad, it's just that 99% of the msi packages out there are junk.

  64. I like windows by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 1
    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well,"

    Couldn't agree more.

    1. Keeping cold air outside
    2. Keeping heated air inside
    3. Letting sunlight in

    And by the way that should have been "that windows do pretty well", verbs, hey!

  65. With all of that money... by Xenogyst · · Score: 1

    I actually like their products, they are still much more put together than any Linux distro has ever managed to be. Of course, what gives me pause about Microsoft and Windows is that for the massive, almost unimaginable amount of money that they make, especially compared to any Linux distro, their product just isn't -that- much better.
    I realize that making an OS is one of the hardest things to do in the programming world, and Microsoft maybe sets it's goals in the wrong places, but with billions to spend on development, why isn't it the best goddamn thing ever? That's where I lose my respect for them.

    1. Re:With all of that money... by jddunlap · · Score: 1

      They are not the best because Microsoft is a monopoly and monopolies do not compete because they do not have to....

  66. Re:I thought OS X Linux by enrevanche · · Score: 2, Insightful

    OS X is only part of a package. You cannot use it by itself, so it is not really an operating system available for general use, it is part of a niche product.

  67. so much for respect being earned by wardk · · Score: 1

    so this would be a freebee to MS? out of the goodness of our hearts?

  68. I'll stop laughing at Microsoft... by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    ... when the quality of Microsoft's products stops being a joke.

  69. Canons of conduct by Mr_Silver · · Score: 0, Redundant

    This (and in fact the rest of the pages) offers some very useful pointers to people advocating Linux. To quote:

    • As a representative of the Linux community, participate in mailing list and newsgroup discussions in a professional manner. Refrain from name-calling and use of vulgar language. Consider yourself a member of a virtual corporation with Mr. Torvalds as your Chief Executive Officer. Your words will either enhance or degrade the image the reader has of the Linux community.
    • Avoid hyperbole and unsubstantiated claims at all costs. It's unprofessional and will result in unproductive discussions.
    • A thoughtful, well-reasoned response to a posting will not only provide insight for your readers, but will also increase their respect for your knowledge and abilities.
    • Don't bite if offered flame-bait. Too many threads degenerate into a ``My O/S is better than your O/S'' argument. Let's accurately describe the capabilities of Linux and leave it at that.
    • Always remember that if you insult or are disrespectful to someone, their negative experience may be shared with many others. If you do offend someone, please try to make amends.
    • Focus on what Linux has to offer. There is no need to bash the competition. Linux is a good, solid product that stands on its own.
    • Respect the use of other operating systems. While Linux is a wonderful platform, it does not meet everyone's needs.
    • Refer to another product by its proper name. There's nothing to be gained by attempting to ridicule a company or its products by using ``creative spelling''. If we expect respect for Linux, we must respect other products.
    • Give credit where credit is due. Linux is just the kernel. Without the efforts of people involved with the GNU project, MIT, Berkeley and others too numerous to mention, the Linux kernel would not be very useful to most people.
    • Don't insist that Linux is the only answer for a particular application. Just as the Linux community cherishes the freedom that Linux provides them, Linux only solutions would deprive others of their freedom.
    • There will be cases where Linux is not the answer. Be the first to recognize this and offer another solution.

    A classic case of this would be Twitter, who in the rare moments when he does come out with something constructive and insightful, tends to ruin any credibility by creatively misspelling Microsoft and Windows.

    Naturally that is his prerogative, but the decision to do that, which he (and others) take, do not particularly help the advocacy of Linux.

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
  70. Ok, you go first by Dada · · Score: 1

    Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition Those aren't the two best contributions from Microsoft by a long shot. In fact, reading this on Slashdot, I hear the negative undertones louder than anything else. And it seems most comments are already taking the bait.
  71. Well then Jim Zemlin can choke on a dick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is the Nazi out to exterminate the Linux Jew. Microsoft is the King George against whom the revolutionary Linux patriot must fight to win freedom. Microsoft is the global dictator bent on nothing less than the enslavement of the human race, and there's no poking fun about it.

    Drop fucking DEAD Jim Zemlin, and anybody else who has a problem with it because I wish to live my life in liberty.

    Anybody who mods this down loves slavery and genocide.

  72. The hard facts are: and the conclusion is.... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is first and foremost a marketing company.

    Second to that, they are a legal firm, to determine what move to make next that the price of getting caught is less than what they will gain.

    Third, they are machine that intentionally destroys and/or absorbs competition by the means of which their legal firm has determined is profitable and their marketing can promote.

    If there is any innovation at all it falls nothing better than forth place of importance to Microsoft.

    Bill Gates got his start by porting BASIC, yelling piracy and later selling an OS they did not own.
    They gained market share through the hype of having applications, good, fair or of poor quality is better than no applications.

    Microsoft has made it very clear that that its two faced, a back stabber and has a criminal record in more than a couple countries.

    Everybody that knows enough about Linux and/or some other OS's and applications know this without question, the bad character of Microsoft. They know not to trust Microsoft.

    Now that this is all pointed out, who the hell is Jim Zemlin, and how is it that he holds a position with the so called Linux foundation (incorrect as its not the foundation of linux at all, Linus is and a great deal of the software that runs on Linux has its foundation with the Free Software Foundation.)

    What the Linux Foundation is, is an effort to establish standards across linux distributions. Its not a foundation at all.

    So in conclusion this is not a matter of forgiving MS for what we know that have done, but rather a mater of questioning who the hell is Jim Zemlin.

    Maybe its time to slap him down for expecting us to ignore what we know.

    Someone sent him a copy of the Halloween documents, so to enlighten him about the spooks who have fooled him.

  73. What? by Monoliath · · Score: 1

    The words 'respect' and 'Microsoft' give birth to blasphemy when used in the same sentence.

  74. Re:I thought OS X Linux by pallmall1 · · Score: 3, Funny

    How can I put this eloquently...
    Here's an old joke:

    Boyfriend asks girlfriend to suck his cock. Girlfriend says she won't because then he won't respect her. Boyfriend promises to respect her and take her out for a big dinner at expensive restaraunt if she does. She sucks his cock, and later they go out for dinner. The waiter arrives and the boyfriend orders for both. He orders lobster for himself, and for her: "...and bring us a steak for the cocksucker here. She loves to eat meat."

    Zemlin is a cocksucker. Microsoft is his meal ticket.
    --
    3 things about computers: they're alive, they're self-aware, and they hate your guts.
  75. If that's what it takes, count me out by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

    Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition. Sorry, I'm not going to play that game. Microsoft is interesting as a case example, but not a role model.

    I demand 100% source for the computer system that I depend on so I can fix bugs and also as a system that a dying company or product line can never take away from me. I learned my lesson from the AT&T Unix PC (which could have been a DOS killer, but as plenty of people have told me - AT&T couldn't market eternal life) and strip(1) on that system. Never more ...

    I personally do not care what the market share is. If you all are happy paying for the same bugs over and over and over again ... whatever. More power to you.

    (I've got karma to burn, so why not ...) I've been playing around with Mac OS X for the past week, and I assure all you mac fan boys that that platform *will* have the same problems as Microsoft if it were ever to gain similar market share. Bad programming practice is bad programming practice whether or not it is on BSD, Linux or whatever. Installing and/or running binaries from off machine is stupid (certificates, trusted people or whatever)! Thank you Microsoft for making this an industry standard.
  76. duopoly? by thatskinnyguy · · Score: 1

    ...duopoly in the market for operating systems It's an oligopoly as it is and always will be. Don't forget the recent growth of Mac.
    --
    The game.
  77. diversity by SideshowBob · · Score: 1

    Not only is there also Mac OS, there is also OpenSolaris, the BSDs, plus a number of niche operating system projects. There is more diversity in personal computing right now than even back in the heyday of 8-bit computing.

    We're definitely not in a duopoly OS world.

    1. Re:diversity by spyowl · · Score: 1

      We're definitely not in a duopoly OS world.

      Yeah yeah yeah - Mac OS X this, OpenSolaris that... In the server room, it's pretty much Windows and Linux - there's your duopoly.
  78. You must not use Linux. by khasim · · Score: 2, Informative

    gconf is, basically, a registry. Yes, a better one, but it's still doing the same job in much the same way.

    It is A registry. But I can boot a Linux box WITHOUT it. And one I can boot it, I can fix it.

    This applies to Linux, as well; cruft builds up in the corners, configurations get slightly broken, and after a while it's frequently easier to reinstall than to clean it out.

    BULLSHIT. I'm typing this on a machine that's been upgraded, online, to Gutsy Gibbon all the way from Hoary Hedgehog. (Hoary - Breezy - Dapper - Edgy - Feisty - Gutsy)

    And I've upgraded during the ALPHA portions of those releases. And I still don't have problems.

    It's called "Computer SCIENCE" for a reason. It's not magic. If something breaks, it can be backed out.

    Windows Live CD.

    And I would use that, how, to fix virus/rootkit on a Windows machine? Be specific.

    I'll give you that one.

    Strange, because that kind of contradicts your other claims. It's the packaging system that allows me to validate the operating system and apps. Which allows me to smoothly upgrade from one release to the next. Which allows me to remove old packages or upgrade them.

    And I haven't even touched on Windows security.
    1. Re:You must not use Linux. by david.given · · Score: 1

      It is A registry. But I can boot a Linux box WITHOUT it. And one I can boot it, I can fix it.

      ...and you can boot a Windows machine without one (to a command line).

      I'm typing this on a machine that's been upgraded, online, to Gutsy Gibbon all the way from Hoary Hedgehog.

      Neat trick, given that Gutsy isn't even out yet...

      It's not magic. If something breaks, it can be backed out.

      Of course it can. I never said it couldn't. What I said was that it's frequently not worth the bother. Why should I spend two days figuring out which file's been corrupted so I can fix it when I can archive of all my data and reinstall in an hour? For a server, sure, it's worth doing. Not necessarily so for a desktop.

      And I would use that, how, to fix virus/rootkit on a Windows machine? Be specific.

      And I would use a Knoppix CD, how, to fix a virus/rootkit on a Linux machine? Be specific.

      You use platform-specific knowledge, you numbskull. I can't do it because I haven't had the training, but I know people who can and have. Likewise, I can fix a broken Linux machine because I have had training --- but they can't, because they haven't.

      Strange, because that kind of contradicts your other claims. It's the packaging system that allows me to validate the operating system and apps.

      Oh, really? When did you last audit all the source code on your system? Actually, I suspect that you just install the binary blobs and trust them. A packaging system has absolutely nothing to do with 'validating' the operating system (whatever that means). There are plenty of Linux distributions that don't have packaging systems; they tend to get put together by builders, that construct and entire bootable file system in one pass --- exactly the way Windows is put together.

      I use Linux every day, professionally and at home. It's OK. There's tonnes of stuff wrong with it but on the whole I like it. I used to use Windows every day, professionally. It's OK. There's tonnes of stuff wrong with it, and on the whole I don't like it (which is why I use Linux at home). Both platforms have flaws, huge gaping ones. Both platforms have a solid underpinning of good technology that make them work. I would certainly pick Windows over Linux for some tasks, and I'd certainly pick Linux over Windows for some tasks --- and I'd pick the BSDs over either for other tasks, too.

      You accuse me of not using Linux. I suspect you've never tried to use Windows, not properly (although you probably play games on it, just to add that hypocritical edge to your post). You should try --- you'd learn something.

    2. Re:You must not use Linux. by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1
      It's called "Computer SCIENCE" for a reason. It's not magic. If something breaks, it can be backed out.


      Have you watched the SICP 86 videos by Hal Abelson and Gerald Sussman? It's neither science nor it's about computers. And it's actually more like MAGIC.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
  79. I would respect Micro$oft if.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they produced a secure OS that wasn't spying on me and was free from DRM & other invasive technology.

    Considering the resources at their disposal, they can do it.

    Respect in not freely given, it's earned!!

  80. Yes, actually you people should... by Toreo+asesino · · Score: 1

    ....us Microsoft people actually have a lot of respect for FOSS products. I personally run a couple of machines on Linux because I think for their intended purpose, Linux is better. Most rational people think this way.

    I rarely meet someone of the opposite polarity (software speaking).

    Linux does not satisfy every need. Microsoft does do some things better. Much better. And the same for Linux too.

    It's like yin and fucking yang - each side should compliment and respect the other, even if diametrically opposed.

    --
    throw new NoSignatureException();
    1. Re:Yes, actually you people should... by FunWithKnives · · Score: 0, Troll

      Just as soon as your bosses begin to respect FLOSS, we will be sure to return the compliment.

      --
      "We may face a scorched and lifeless earth, but they're accountable to their shareholders first."
  81. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  82. Yes Respect Microsoft by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

    Ok, here is the situation (whether you like it or not.) Microsoft is a dominate operating system company and their influence is everywhere. Regardless of the fact of how or why or when this happened this is how it is.

    With the situation being as it is there are two things you can do. Fight it tooth and nail, or just accept it and deal with it. You say fight it tooth and nail. Yet the Linux vendors (who happened to be earning real money) are saying, lets deal with it, and accept as part of the landscape.

    Me I say let's deal with it because I have no intention on being a martyr, or wasting my breath. Life is literally too short. Heck with Microsoft trying to play nice with Linux there is a market opportunity. Think about why Microsoft and Linux is getting along so well... Think hard... Its Apple! So since I am no fan of Apple, one could use the opportunity to grow Linux while Microsoft sees this as an advantage.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  83. Re:I thought OS X Linux by iluvcapra · · Score: 3, Insightful

    by that standard, HPU/X, Solaris and SunOS,Irix and all the DEC Unixes weren't operating systems either.

    The provision of "general use" is unecessary. A platform is a platform.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
  84. Only a Coward Would by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What ? Poke fun at Mycro$oft ?
        Who the ... ?

        I'd *never* do that.

        Too easy.

  85. Track by wytcld · · Score: 1

    a good track record in fending off competition
    Microsoft has large done that through FUD - especially doubt. So let's emulate Microsoft's track record of casting doubt on the competition:

    You might be happy with Microsoft today. But if your firm is based on Microsoft products, and your competition is based on Free, Open Source Software, which firm will have the advantage five years from now? The Microsoft customer with all their eggs in one basket? Or the FOSS customer with eggs in baskets provided by IBM, Sun, Oracle, Novell, Red Hat, Canonical ... and the hundreds, even thousands of smaller, focused FOSS firms bringing their innovations to market today and tomorrow?

    Microsoft ... proud like the Titanic!
    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  86. I do respect them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do respect them, just dont trust or like their ways... people who dont know better, sometimes get the problems resulting from that relation (sooner or later, knowing or not)

    Every responsable person ask or search for opinions when making uneducated decitions... its really hard for honest knowleable it people to not mention microsoft products shortcomings

    People who commit to microsoft products whitout excuses (there are many valid ones: local support + ease of use / price point, etc) or pride... deserve being laught at for doing silly decitions

    I think the same of the linux fan boys

    This news is like: "dont laught of the people in the funny-videos tv-shows"

  87. In a word: no. by kimvette · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the open source community should stop poking fun at Microsoft.


    As long as they claim to have the most secure operating system ever: No.
    As long as they count one defect against Linux multiple times in comparisons: No.
    As long as they treat paying customers like criminals: No.
    As long as their software comes without a warranty and they use a lack of a Linux warranty as a reason to not use OSS: No.
    As long as they do not count "maintenance windows" as part of downtime in their uptime/availability comparisons: No.
    As long as their marketing literature is based on lies/FUD rather than facts: No.
    As long as their 2007 "3D desktop"'s features barely matches that of what OS X could do in 2003: No. Want a proper 3D desktop? Check out XGL and Beryl on Linux, 3D Desktop on OS X.

    I think we'll be making fun of Microsoft for years to come, as long as they keep up their FUD and they keep promoting minor cosmetic changes, DRM, and annoying features like [CANCEL] [CONTINUE] as innovations.
    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    1. Re:In a word: no. by swokm · · Score: 1

      ++

      Hell yeah! Nicely put. Who is this guy and why does he think MS eve NEEDS protection?! Yeesh.

    2. Re:In a word: no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As long as they claim to have the most secure operating system ever: No." - kimvette (919543) on Saturday August 11, @03:27PM (#20197269)

      Well, tell you what (like I have to 25 others here 25 times here before, & had nothing but evasions over from *NIX people (AND, in fact? I can post the list of url's for that IF you like also in any replies to you IF you reply back)):

      DOWNLOAD THIS MULTIPLATFORM TEST OF ONLINE SECURITY (by the CENTER FOR INTERNET SECURITY):

      http://www.cisecurity.org/bench.html

      Install & run it on your *NIX rig, & post the score you get!

      (Then, I'll post a screenshot of what I am able to "CUSTOM HARDEN" Windows Server 2003 SP #2 fully current hotfix patched to, as a comparison (AND, how I do it as well)).

      Fair enough?

      BY THE WAY? THIS TEST IS LEGIT, & EVEN NOTED BY SANS + COMPUTERWORLD, IN THE NEXT 2 URLS BELOW:

      COMPUTERWORLD - CIS tool aims to help federal agencies check Windows security settings:

      http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?com mand=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9018362&intsrc=hm_ list

      SANS - CIS to Release Windows Configuration Assessment Tool: (May 1, 2007)

      http://www.sans.org/newsletters/newsbites/newsbite s.php?vol=9&issue=36#sID302

      APK

      P.S.=> Hey- it's true that benchmarks aren't "EVERYTHING", & it's more the 'man behind the wheel' (in configuring a system for PERFORMANCE, or SECURITY)!

      HOWEVER? Benchmarks are the best initial comparisons we have (hence, why tools like benchmarks exist, period really)... apk

    3. Re:In a word: no. by realdodgeman · · Score: 1

      "The worlds most secure operating system" should not be susceptible to 95% of the worlds malware and viruses. Nor should it have a password hashing standard that can be broken in less than 20 minutes. And it should not bug the user with questions for "extra security".

    4. Re:In a word: no. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Benchmarks are the best initial comparisons we have

      No, statistics are.

      That's why, for example, if you want to compare how much power a given CPU uses in the real world, you don't run SuperPI. You stick that CPU in a server, attach a meter to its power, and measure. Or you look at the electric bill -- whatever.

      If you want to compare security, collect data on actual attacks and compromises. And as the other poster says, Windows has been compromised far more than we'd like, even considering its market share.

      Take your typical botnet. How many of its nodes are Windows? How many botnets are entirely Windows-based? How many have ANY Linux or OS X nodes?

      had nothing but evasions

      I've got a story for you...

      The other day, I walked up to a girl in the bar and said "Nice shoes, wanna fuck?" She said "No. Get lost."

      Can you believe it? The bitch was evading me!!!!111!one

      Or maybe -- just maybe -- she actually wasn't interested, or didn't have the time.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  88. Re:I thought OS X Linux by mbone · · Score: 1

    Neither was the IBM 360 or 370 OS, VAX VMS, Dec PDP, etc., etc. In fact, by that standard, no computer that I have ever used on a regular basis had an operating system, except for Linux. Hmm...

  89. Incoherent by mbone · · Score: 1

    He may of course have been misquoted, but this is simply not coherent :

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"

    Uh, Microsoft's marketing abilities and competitive instinct are attributes of the company, not the OS.

  90. My response by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    STFU.

    There. :)

  91. He is wrong by realdodgeman · · Score: 1

    "Open source vendors have to recognize that Windows is here to stay and that together with Microsoft it will form a duopoly in the market for operating systems."

    Wrong. Windows might not be here to stay. If Linux would ever reach a reasonable market share, Windows would be as good as buried within a few years.

  92. Respect? by zefrer · · Score: 1

    Respect has to earned. Microsoft has done nothing to earn that respect, I'd hardly call "good marketing" worthy of respect. This is an understandably political comment but even so, it's the kind of thing you'd expect to hear from Microsoft, not the Linux Foundation...

  93. Now Hear This... by swokm · · Score: 1

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition. "Yes, and also I now decree that all FOSS developers must now call themselves 'freetards' the the request of Mr. Ballmer."

    "Oh, and by 'marketing', I mean lying, cheating, and illegally 'knifing the baby', to use MS' own words, as they did to Gary Kildall to even start the company. That will be all."
  94. Be careful by melted · · Score: 1

    While engineers at Microsoft don't hold anything against FOSS (mostly), there are plenty of non-engineering people who won't pass up an opportunity to screw FOSS over as bad as they can. Legal, marketing, mid-to-upper management - all pretty powerful people. And engineers will mostly just do what they're told to do since 90% of them are there for a paycheck.

    This is not to say that MSFT doesn't deserve respect for _some_ of its products (W2K, XP, Office 2007, Visual Studio, dev tools, SQL 2005), just don't be careless. There are people there whose day job is to screw FOSS over.

  95. Respect because its professional by socerhed · · Score: 1

    He's right that we should respect Microsoft. It doesn't mean that we shouldn't ridicule them, but we should act professional and respect them because whether or not you agree with them, its the professional thing to do. Linux is always going to be the fanboy's OS as long as the people supporting it act like juveniles. Now thats not to say poking fun behind closed doors isn't allowed, but to the public we need to act professional. Do you really expect people to trust an OS, the backbone of one of their most important assets, that is backed by unprofessional juveniles?

    --
    LostHobo.com
    Soup Kitchen of the Internet
    1. Re:Respect because its professional by madgreek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We don't have to respect Microsoft, but we should discuss our differences in a respectful manner. I used to attend Comdex in Vegas regularly several years ago. I remember the first year they had a Linux area on display. Some of the "vendors" that were representing Linux and OSS were extremely unprofessional. They acted more like the anti-Vietnam protesters of the 70's. I did not have any issue with their point of view but as a believer in OSS I was embarrassed by their behavior and could see the negative impact that it was having on those who did not know a lot about OSS. So my recommendation is that in professional work settings and business oriented discussion boards and forums, we should act like professionals and clearly articulate our point of views based on research and personal experiences. On sites like Slashdot, Digg, Delicious, etc. it is ok to flame although there is little to gain from it. Acting like a whiny child on a Computerworld.com or CIO.com website is really bad for OSS.

  96. in the interest of striking a balance: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux users are cheetos-covered, neckbeard-sporting, sweaty, obese virgins!

    (this is about as true as saying Microsoft makes shitty software)

    (it's completely true)

  97. respect deez by Javanon · · Score: 1

    Microsoft can respect deez nutz

  98. Re:I have respect for the Mafia too by slickwillie · · Score: 1

    Doesn't mean I have to like it.

  99. Show me you can, don't tell me you can. by khasim · · Score: 1

    ...and you can boot a Windows machine without one (to a command line).

    So you claim. So it should be easy for you to tell me how to do that on a machine on which I have over-written the Registry. Go ahead, explain how.

    Neat trick, given that Gutsy isn't even out yet...

    Did you see the word "ALPHA"? Do you KNOW what "alpha" means? It means I'm running the ALPHA release of Gutsy Gibbon on this machine, right now. No, it's not much of a "trick". It's easy. Lots of people are doing it.

    alt-f2
    sudo update-manager -c

    It's that easy.

    What I said was that it's frequently not worth the bother.

    "not worth the bother". It's more of a "bother" to backup the package that broke than it is to re-image the entire box? What are you talking about?

    Why should I spend two days figuring out which file's been corrupted so I can fix it when I can archive of all my data and reinstall in an hour?

    Because it doesn't take "two days". Whatever you just installed, you back out.

    dpkg --remove package-name

    It's that easy.

    You use platform-specific knowledge, you numbskull. I can't do it because I haven't had the training, but I know people who can and have.

    Ahhhhhh, so this is another one of those.

    Excuse me for misunderstanding your claims that you knew what you were talking about.

    And I would use a Knoppix CD, how, to fix a virus/rootkit on a Linux machine? Be specific.

    Boot the Live CD.
    Chroot the local hard drive.
    Use the package manager to validate the files in the directories. Any that you cannot validate, you move to a safe location. If necessary, re-install the package that owns those files.

    It's that easy.

    Actually, I suspect that you just install the binary blobs and trust them. A packaging system has absolutely nothing to do with 'validating' the operating system (whatever that means).

    You don't know what it means ... but you know that the process I've described won't achieve it.

    Yeah, you go with that.
    1. Re:Show me you can, don't tell me you can. by Cathbard · · Score: 1

      touche khasim. It's amazing how many bs people talk about linux when they don't know shit. My pc is a debian sid (that means it's the unstable branch with all the latest stuff around for Mr know it all, knows nothing) that is many years old and gets upgraded almost weekly and it's still running like a champion. I had to remove a dodgey windows update that completely crash somebody's machine a while ago and needed to be booted into a dos prompt from the windows install disc to repair. I then had to either search back into my long term memory for dos commands or I could find it with a whole suite of marvelous gui apps on a linux live disc. Guess which method I used.

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    2. Re:Show me you can, don't tell me you can. by david.given · · Score: 1

      Boot the Live CD. Chroot the local hard drive. Use the package manager to validate the files in the directories. Any that you cannot validate, you move to a safe location. If necessary, re-install the package that owns those files.

      Congratulations! You've just been pwned. You've just used a compromised copy of dpkg to verify that all the package-installed executables on your system are clean. Even if you hadn't made the elemental mistake of running compromised software from a known-clean session, this particular worm is living in the executable, modifiable, uncheckable configuration files in /etc/default/* (with some backup copies in ~/.login and ~/.bashrc just for amusement value).

      It's that easy.

      Yup. It is, indeed, that easy.

      But then, you're such an expert you knew all this already. Heavens, you must know what you're doing --- you run alpha software on a production machine.

  100. I'm sorry, what do they do well? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1
    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"

    Yawn... Is there anything, perhaps, technological that they do well?

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  101. I'd lose respect for myself in the process ... by tomhudson · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Microsoft's continual lying and dirty tricks indicates a gross lack of integrity at the very top. You cannot respect someone you cannot trust, and still respect yourself.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respect

    Respect is an assumption of good faith and competence in another person or in the whole of oneself. Depth of integrity, trust, complementary moral values, and skill are necessary components.

    Respect adds general reliability to social interactions. It enables people to work together in a complimentary fashion, instead of each person having to understand or even agree with every detail of another's method.

    Requirements

    Respect forms for a person whose actions tend to create results that are generally considered good, beneficial to the appraiser or superior in some form. Integrity of principle is necessary for general consistency of action. Moral values of each party that complement each other lead to communal progress. This can happen consensually, such as with respect between disparate craftsmen working to build a house, or through conflict and elimination, such as respect for an enemy. Trust that some common goal is the actual intention of the other is necessary for respect, even if that goal is to leave the best competitor standing. Belief in the ability to reach the goal must also be assumed, even where the means is not known.

    Respect is said to be "earned" when a party demonstrates all of the concept's requirements. Integrity is demonstrated through accountability of one's actions with outcome and adjustment of principles as necessary. Trust is demonstrated through consistency of claimed intent and action, with responsibility for inconsistencies and adjustment of moral values and expectations as needed. Skill is demonstrated by reaching or exceeding one's goals. Complementary moral values are achieved by either a consensual convergence of ideas or a combative elimination of inferior principles as demonstrated by failure to reach one's goal.

    Microsoft has gone out of its way continually to avoid fair competition, accountability for its own illegal actions, etc. They are unredeemable and should be treated as pariahs, not lionized (unless you're a dickhead* nicknamed "Pretenderle", the MoGTroll, or "Lyin' Lyons").

    *WARNING - link is "NSA" - "Not Safe Anywhere"

    1. Re:I'd lose respect for myself in the process ... by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 1

      *WARNING - link is "NSA" - "Not Safe Anywhere"

      "Not Something Accessible", perhaps?

      Okay, never mind, I fixed the link... shouldn't have. Thanks for the warning.

  102. Like what, for instance? by kwabbles · · Score: 1

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said.

    I always thought that Windows is one of those things that does everything okay, but nothing really well.

    What is it that Windows does well, except for "dumbing down" a computer for the common unexperienced user?

    --
    Just disrupt the deflector shield with a tachyon burst.
  103. Marketing makes Windows good?! by x_bob · · Score: 1

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition" -- Yes, good marketing is what one looks for in a good OS.

  104. Re:Active Directory by amsr · · Score: 1

    While Active Directory gets the job done, its by far not an excellent product. They could really use to shed all the NT crap and just use Kerberos and LDAP, and update their tools so setting and creating group policy isn't such a frickin nightmare. I guess AD is pretty good because it pretty much works, no matter how boneheaded the config is, but elegant and intuitive... eh... Just be glad your PC can still talk NetBIOS or it might not even be finding your domain. Oh well, its not like anyone can even think of getting off AD anytime soon, seeing as thats what exchange needs. So its kind of a moot point. FWIW Sun and Novell have very good directory products as well.

  105. Freakin' Wah by bitspotter · · Score: 1

    You're kidding me.

    I'd much rather Microsoft and it's "ecosystem" make louder fun of GNU. They could do with a sense of humor.

    Respect and ridicule are not mutually exclusive by any means. In some instances, "we kid because we love". Criticism is critical to progress, and wit is critical to criticism. Why do you think kings tolerated court jesters?

    You don't see FOSS communities clamoring for "respect", or whinig "stop making fun of me! Respect mah authori-tie!" Grow a damn spine, and quit pouting.

  106. buying off? by kiso · · Score: 1

    so, microsoft is not competing, it's just buying off major open-source figures. and it's not funny. a "duopoly" basically means to become partners and play by the same rules.

  107. This is why... by ribo-bailey · · Score: 0

    "Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition." This is why the "Linux Community" ridicules MS, their positive points are not technical ones.

  108. We didn't start this war... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and we will not surrender.
    "we shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender." as a wise man once said.
    ...and btw. we will not survive if we try to live peacfully with Microsoft... just look where all the big companies of the 90'ties are...

  109. leaders? compromises? by postmodern+modulus+I · · Score: 1

    Who elected Jim Zemlin as the leader of the Open Source movement? Why must we all suddenly ignore Microsoft's past and co-operate with an anti-competitive company? Furthermore, forming a duopoly with Microsoft is a huge insult to the ideals of Free Software / Open Source which arose to challenge software monopolies and increase software diversity. By forming a duopoly one might get Linux into the mainstream OS market, but what about all the other OSes, present and future, must they have to co-operate with Microsoft in order to gain market-share? Instead of compromising ideals for short-term gains, I personally, would rather see Linux and other OSes thrive independently. Microsoft may still be a huge force within the OS world, but they are showing signs of weakness and indecision.

    --
    --postmodern
  110. A seriously stupid remark from this guy by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 0, Troll

    First of all, you don't "respect" total fucking liars and rip-off artists. Which is who Bill Gates IS.

    Second, the fact that Microsoft does well in marketing and monopoly is hardly a reason to respect them. It damn sure isn't a reason to respect their technology.

    Is this moron really part of the Linux Foundation or is he just another Microsoft shill/agent provocateur?

    If so, I hereby volunteer to replace his ass for considerably less money.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  111. Respect is earned by slashdotlurker · · Score: 1

    Respect is earned. Not demanded or begged for. If Linux foundation wants respect for Microsoft, they could do well by getting Microsoft to make Microsoft Office ODF compliant (and I do not mean half-baked one way conversion plugins), and ditching OOXML.

  112. Gates is the Chief of Grief. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "This also requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it."

    He's another computer professional with zero social experience. People don't like Microsoft because Microsoft is abusive. For example:

    Embrace, Extend, Extinguish" or
    "The whole world is our beta tester" or
    "We can release sloppy, sloppy code because we have a virtual monopoly" or
    "Security vulnerabilities make us money because many people with infected computers buy new computers, and therefore buy another copy of Windows".

    Bill Gates is the Chief of Grief in the computer world. When you partner with Microsoft, you are partnering with someone who will be partly an enemy if that makes more money.

    1. Re:Gates is the Chief of Grief. by W2k · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Embrace, Extend, Extinguish
      This is called "pointless forking" and "not invented here syndrome" in the open source world. Feh, big deal.

      The whole world is our beta tester
      Google does this. Apple does this. Every open source project ever released does this.

      We can release sloppy, sloppy code because we have a virtual monopoly
      The open source version of this is "you have no right to complain because you got it for free" and "you got the source code so fix it yourself". Also, Microsoft doesn't have a monopoly on anything at this point in time. Also, there are plenty of other non-monopolists who release poorly-made products.

      Security vulnerabilities make us money...
      This is just FUD. Show me any proof that this is how Microsoft reasons. Furthermore, it's pathetic to blame Microsoft because people are stupid. Oblig. car analogy: For years, Mercedes cars have had problems with premature body rust. Would you consider this a scheme to get people to buy new cars more often?

      When you partner with Microsoft, you are partnering with someone who will be partly an enemy if that makes more money.
      This is mostly true for all companies. It's about making money, not being cozy friends with everybody.

      --
      Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
    2. Re:Gates is the Chief of Grief. by AndyCR · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Embrace, Extend, Extinguish This is called "pointless forking" and "not invented here syndrome" in the open source world. Feh, big deal. Name one time it was done to intentionally warp a standard, kill a technology, or otherwise harm computing as we know it.

      The whole world is our beta tester Google does this. Apple does this. Every open source project ever released does this. Yeah, if they STATE it. The point is that Open Source BETA products are just as stable as Microsoft RELEASE products. I'm running Ubuntu Gutsy, and even though its months from release (with a 6 month development period total) it's more stable than Vista.

      We can release sloppy, sloppy code because we have a virtual monopoly The open source version of this is "you have no right to complain because you got it for free" and "you got the source code so fix it yourself". And the open source version is true. I certainly expect higher quality products when I pay for them as opposed to getting them free; however, that that is almost always not the case makes the entire point moot.
      --
      If there's anyone I hate more than stupid people, it's intellectuals.
    3. Re:Gates is the Chief of Grief. by Yfrwlf · · Score: 1

      This is mostly true for all companies. It's about making money, not being cozy friends with everybody.

      I could respond to the rest but...I am insanely tired of the argument that it's OK to only care about money, and in doing so you can in no way do anything mean to anyone else. It's a sad day when being greedy is seen as a positive attribute. The world sucks enough as it is, you don't have to try to perpetuate that further. MS has done a lot of things that aren't good for us, but benefit them instead. Us, meaning taxpayers, consumers, and developers alike, have all been hurt by MS in one way or another, from our pocketbooks to the progression of open source software. For example, a lot of your tax money has gone to school systems (I work in one) and other government institutions to pay for ridiculously-priced software, and if they would all simply cooperate they could easily fund the development a thousand times over of any open source software that they all need to use. MS pays money to prevent government agencies from adopting competitive standards. You fuck over the taxpayers and consumers so that your own business can profit. Could you argue that it's the laws in the U.S. and the corruption that are the problem, and not MS? To a degree, but if you made murder legal that doesn't take away the blame from the one who committed it. Being an asshole is still being an asshole, no matter if it's technically legal or not. It'd be very sad if someone's morals were based solely on the law.

      I hate lecturing those who are probably just trolls. The typical Slashdot thread:

      Headline: MS Did Another Bad Thing!

      Informed Poster: That sucks, MS was an asshole to us consumers for doing that.

      Uninformed Poster (often simply a troll): Why do you always have to pick on MS, they've never done anything bad! Caring about only money is OK!

      Maybe you live on the planet Awesomeness, where everyone is looked after and consumers don't get raped, but especially here in America, companies fucking over consumers is a common occurrence. We have to put up with a LOT of shit and often have NO alternatives.

      "Hmmmm, do I want to get shit on, or thrown off a cliff....damn it, I guess I'll choose to be shit on again."

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
    4. Re:Gates is the Chief of Grief. by W2k · · Score: 1

      I somewhat agree with what you wrote. However, Microsoft did not set the rules of the game, the governments of the respective countries in which Microsoft operates did. Microsoft are merely playing by those rules (except in some cases, and the courts have had their say about that, as you well know) and doing very well at it. A single company can't choose to "play nice" and continue making business as usual because they would be clobbered by the competition (except in a few very extreme cases - but even Google aren't very good at sticking to the "do no evil" mantra, re China for example) and they would make their shareholders very very angry indeed.

      I will be the first one to agree with you if you say the current rules are bad. But clobbering a company for being greedy is missing the big picture. Fix your politicians, you guys are the ones who elect them (I live in Sweden).

      BTW, comparing murder to bad business practices is comparing apples to oranges. Bad business practices cost money - not lives, except possibly by extreme extension and guilt by association, neither of which I'm inclined to except as rational argument.

      If you still think I'm a troll, I invite you to examine my posting history.

      --
      Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
    5. Re:Gates is the Chief of Grief. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just off the top of my head:

      iCalendar. They hide the free/busy time in X- declarations rather than the ones in the standard (that they helped write!)

      ldap - Active Directory uses ldap type objects, except that they make some of them binary blobs that are unaccessible unless you use mapi transports. Thus locking up some information that really should be available. Also, they really should've used the community standard items, like username and what not instead of SMAccount name. But, meh.

    6. Re:Gates is the Chief of Grief. by AndyCR · · Score: 1

      Just off the top of my head: iCalendar. They hide the free/busy time in X- declarations rather than the ones in the standard (that they helped write!) ldap - Active Directory uses ldap type objects, except that they make some of them binary blobs that are unaccessible unless you use mapi transports. Thus locking up some information that really should be available. Also, they really should've used the community standard items, like username and what not instead of SMAccount name. But, meh. Was that done to intentionally warp a standard, kill a technology, or harm computing as we know it? No, it was done because a programmer (stupidly) thought he could "do it better" than the standard.

      There's a big difference here, and the difference is intent.
      --
      If there's anyone I hate more than stupid people, it's intellectuals.
    7. Re:Gates is the Chief of Grief. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Microsoft did not set the rules of the game"

      Actually, lobbiest are paid by Micro$oft to make sure the rules are the way Micro$oft wants them. With enough money big corps can make the rules (in this case laws) they way they want them.

  113. yeah sure by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

    Microsoft sucks, period.
    I still haven't decided if Linux is better than MacOS from the desktop user point of view.

    There goes your assertion.

    --
    ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
  114. Re:Active Directory by lordtoran · · Score: 1

    Nice troll account you have there! I like the nick, especially.

    --
    Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
  115. Teh Lunix NEEDS Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it weren't for Microsoft's tail lights, FOSS would have NOTHING.

    Just think about it: Lunix on the desktop is still chasing MS's tail lights, but maybe in ten years or so, they will have caught up to Windows 95. So once teh Lunix gets there, just imagine how much of a debt they will owe MS: after all, had MS not created Windows 95 over ten years ago, the FOSSies would have had nothing to rip off... and likely wouldn't exist.

    And let's look at MS Office, aka the template for Open Office. If there were no MSO, what would they rip off, WordPerfect? Crap ripping off crap... that wouldn't even be worth the bother.

    Microsoft really did change the world, and all the FOSSies did was follow along and try to recreate MS's innovation. If MS were gone... what could the FOSSies copy?

  116. not so fast.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yes, Windows has contributed much for everyday users of computers - it has made many things possible that may not have been possible otherwise

    But there were many, many other ways to do it and many, many
    other people who would have done it, and were working on it,
    until they were squashed.

    We may have to get on with life, but we should never forget
    what Microsoft did to get where they are.

  117. I won't even say "nice try". by khasim · · Score: 1

    Congratulations! You've just been pwned. You've just used a compromised copy of dpkg to verify that all the package-installed executables on your system are clean.

    I'm booting from a Live CD. Did you miss that part? Or is it that you don't know what "chroot" is?

    You cannot tell me how you would boot into a Windows command prompt after the Registry is destroyed ... yet you believe that I cannot run dpkg from a Live CD?

    Even if you hadn't made the elemental mistake of running compromised software from a known-clean session, this particular worm is living in the executable, modifiable, uncheckable configuration files in /etc/default/* (with some backup copies in ~/.login and ~/.bashrc just for amusement value).

    A quick check on my /etc directory indicates only 258 such files (not counting links or directories).

    Of which, 257 were validated by dpkg.

    Leaving ... the 1 file that I know I put in /etc/cron.d

    And if it were in "~/.login and ~/.bashrc" then it would only have the rights that that user has.

    To put it in very simple terms for you, the SYSTEM would not have been compromised, just that USER's account. And since the SYSTEM was not compromised, then validating the files in that USER's account would not even require me booting from a Live CD.

    Now, I've been able to address each of your claims, with specificity, while you've been unable to address any of mine except with claims that you saw someone else do it sometime in the past.

    I've demonstrated my knowledge. You've demonstrated your's. Feel free to continue this conversation without me.
    1. Re:I won't even say "nice try". by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      You run from a live cd, then chroot in. Thus the dpkg executable that you'll run is the one installed. i.e. the compromised one.

    2. Re:I won't even say "nice try". by david.given · · Score: 1

      I'm booting from a Live CD. Did you miss that part? Or is it that you don't know what "chroot" is?

      Oh, boy. Yes, I do. You apparently don't.

      When you do chroot [dir] [cmd], the root directory is changed to [dir] and then [cmd] is executed from that root directory. If you don't specify [cmd] it defaults to /bin/sh.

      Which means that when you do chroot /mnt/compromised, then what you've actually done is loaded a compromised binary off the compromised file system which has pulled in compromised shared libraries etc. As root. If you're going to do that you might as well not bother with the live CD in the first place.

      What you meant to do was use dpkg's --root option. This allows you to tell a dpkg that's been loaded from one root file system to work on another root file system. This way you avoid running any compromised binaries and screwing yourself over. Of course, this would require you to actually know what you were doing, rather than merely thinking you know what you're doing.

      To put it in very simple terms for you, the SYSTEM would not have been compromised, just that USER's account.

      Oh, look, the worm's hacked your .bashrc to use a custom sudo command! Congratulations, your USER account has just contaminated your SYSTEM (as you so quaintly put it).

      On your average Linux desktop these days, there's only one real user account. This means that all the valuable data is owned by user, which in turn means that if that account gets compromised you're just as screwed as if /bin/sh got compromised. Probably more so; /bin/sh can be reinstalled from the CD. Your data files can't.

      You know the saying, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing? That's you. You see, you need to be an expert to fix this kind of problem. You think you know how. You don't. In fact, what you know is actively dangerous: you're going to end up with a system that you think is clean, but which is still potentially contaminated. If you knew less, you'd be far safer --- in your situation, a complete reinstallation would be far more reliable and rather less work.

      Of course, it probably wouldn't help, because you seem to be rather sketchy as to the difference between an executable and a data file and you probably wouldn't quarantine your user data properly...

    3. Re:I won't even say "nice try". by fortyonejb · · Score: 1

      why are you bothering with a troll he's obviously a linux zealot. Leave the crusaders alone, let them huff and puff. Allegiance to an O.S. is the silliest thing in the world. Go ahead and hate microsoft. I'll support both systems and let the customer decide and pay me. And when windows has problems I'll let them pay me more. Let him wage his war, its pretty funny.

    4. Re:I won't even say "nice try". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which means that when you do chroot /mnt/compromised, then what you've actually done is loaded a compromised binary off the compromised file system which has pulled in compromised shared libraries etc. As root. If you're going to do that you might as well not bother with the live CD in the first place.

      Jeez, do you even know what the fuck "mount --bind" is for? You don't run the "compromised" dpkg, bitch, you run the one from the liveCD, in the chroot environment. If you're feeling a little extra-super paranoid, you re-download your distro's PGP keys and bind them into the chroot beforehand too, just in case some super-obsessive/compulsive-disorder cracker replaced your keys and then rewrote every single package's signatures to match them, all so he could hide the files from a clean dpkg, as well as his compromised one.

        You should really avoid dismissing people's arguments out of hand when you don't know what they're talking about. Computer security is a process, and Linux has one of the best such processes available.

  118. It's funny. Laugh. by mirshafie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's surely a joke, right?

    I mean, there are some things Microsoft have done right. You can't say anything about their gaming tools, for one thing. So this Jim Zemlin guy must be some kind of very sarcastic hatemonger :)

  119. Linux Foundation does not speak for the community by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

    Quite the contrary it would seem. Microsoft is still unabashedly evil. Look no further than the shenanigans in Massachusetts.

    --
    Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
  120. Windows also has ... by Luscious868 · · Score: 1

    Consistent copy and paste functionality beyond text between applications and sane software installation programs. Until Linux has the same it will remain a joke on the desktop.

    1. Re:Windows also has ... by gujo-odori · · Score: 1

      I know I'm just feeding a troll here, but software is far easier to install on Linux than on Windows. In most distros, it's strictly point and click, all dependencies handled. No having to go to some website and download the software first. No having to run an installer for each program individually and having to click through multiple screens, often including a proprietary license agreement that no one reads anyway. No adware. No spyware. Doing a full system upgrade to a new version also happens with just a few clicks on most major distros. No reinstall needed. No flaky migration wizards needed.

      This same ease of use goes for installation. Most Linux distros today are easier to install than XP or Vista, and a number of them will even automatically partition your disk for you if you want to keep Windows.

      There are some areas (not many, and the gap is narrowing all the time) where Windows still has an edge over Linux, but ease of installation, for either applications software or the OS, is not one of them. You've missed cleanly. In those areas where Windows still has an edge over Linux on the desktop, Windows is not the target to shoot at anyway, because the things that Windows does better than Linux, it doesn't necessarily do well; it just currently does them better than Linux. The Target to shoot at in those areas is OS X, which stands head and shoulders above GNOME, KDE, and Windows in most areas of usability.

      I find OS X to be somewhat inflexible in some areas and that inflexibility is annoying enough that I still prefer KDE, even though it doesn't have the consistency and usability of OS X (yet), but overall, OS X's high usability and supreme UI consistency is the target to shoot for. As a long-time Linux user and new (from this year) Mac user, every time I have to use Windows, the overall kludginess and lack of ease of use compared to either KDE or OS X (yes, you read that right: lack of ease of use) makes me want to rip my hair out. That makes Windows a lot better qualified to be called a desktop joke, IMO.

      Linux has already surpassed Windows as a desktop OS in most respects. You're confusing dominant market share stemming from past innovation in a young market, combined with expert marketing and a huge cash reserve to support that dominant position, with technical superiority. The technical superiority war is already over, and the *nix camp won. Now we're just conducting the mop-up operation. It's like the Pacific war in WW II. After Midway, Japan was finished. There remained over three years of difficult fighting before the war ended, but the momentum had shifted and the outcome was no longer in real doubt.

      When we look back in a few years, 2007 is going to be seen as the year that was the tipping point, the Midway of the Linux-Windows wars. I'm not predicting absolute victory over Microsoft the way absolute victory was achieved in WW II, but there will be an OS parity in which Linux is a fully supported platform alongside Windows by the major vendors, with a large share of the desktop market held by Linux, the BSDs, and OS X. I would not be the least bit surprised to see Microsoft reduced to a 50% marketshare on the desktop 10 years from now. Rather than Midway, the battle will be called Vista. With it's high price, lack of compelling reasons to upgrade, confusing number of different versions, and steeper hardware requirements (and the announcement the other day that Vista SP 1 will obsolete DirectX 10 hardware with DirectX 10.1, whee!), Vista is proving to be the catalyst for a lot of people to try Linux or OS X.

      As a troll, you may laugh at that prediction, but I've been using Linux on the desktop for 10 years, since back in the days when it was actually hard, and most Windows users had never heard of Linux, or even UNIX. Now, most Windows users have not only heard of Linux, chances are pretty good they know someone who uses it. I've watched Linux go through the "Ghandi" phases: "First they ignore you; then they laugh at you; then they fight you; then you win." Linux i

    2. Re:Windows also has ... by Luscious868 · · Score: 1

      Not every piece of software someone may want to install on their Linux system will be included in the distro. Using that excuse is a major cop out therefore the original statement stands. Installing programs on Linux is much more complicated then installing software on Windows. Installing software that's "a part of the distro" is just as easy on Windows as it is on Linux Linux. Nice try.

    3. Re:Windows also has ... by El_Oscuro · · Score: 1

      Since when is Windows copy/paste functionality consistent? I never, under any circumstances use drag and drop. Sometimes it copies the files, sometimes it moves them, sometimes it creates shortcuts. You never know. Whenever you copy or paste text from a website into a document or between documents, emails, etc, Office always transfers all of the fonts and formatting with the text, instead of just the text which is usually what you want. Yes, I know about paste special, but half the time it is greyed out or not available, and you have to use Notepad paste. Then, there is that annoying clipboard toolbar that is supposed to manage multiple clipboards but just gets in the way

      As for installation, I once wanted to reinstall Office, but couldn't remove the old version because I didn't have the original CD used to install it. I had an Office CD, but apparently it wasn't the same one used to install it. Since when to you need the CD to remove software? Some of the Microsoft installation screens don't have an install button at all. Instead, they have cancel button where the install button would be. The actual install button is at the top of the screen with a picture of a computer or something that looks more like a billboard graphic than an install button. I have to explain to everyone (including IT professionals) where it is, it is so counterintuitive. I'll take Synaptic, YAST, or CNR any day over this.

      --
      "Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
  121. Microsoft does not want a duopoly by bl8n8r · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is not about sharing. Microsoft is not about community. Microsoft's interests are completely and strictly, monetary. What MS cannot invent it buys. What it cannot innovate, it steals. What it cannot steal it smothers in judicial and legal methods. The Microsoft mentality runs 180 degrees opposite to everything Open Source is about, and history is, unfortunately, a very good indicator of future behaviour.

    Linux foundation or not, the idea simply cannot work. There is very little trust of Microsoft in their own customer base let alone any in the Open Source projects (besides Novell and that's likely questionable). The Lying, paid for FUD'ing (Yankee Group), and monetarily sponsored legal campaigns (SCO, RBC) and lobbying has done little to improve that.

    There have been way too many bridges burned by Microsoft over the last 20 some years (starting with Apple) for anyone to seriously consider any kind of reckoning, partnership or trust based relationship. Even if MS was to attempt to mend those bridges, it would take a very long time for anyone to trust them enough to be led down them.

    This article is simply fanciful, farcicle and whimsical at best.

    --
    boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
  122. Why LinuxWorld is no fun by BoldAndBusted · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I went to 4 LinuxWorld Expos in San Francisco, where I live. I enjoyed the first two, primarily because of the conferences, and the camaraderie. Once I get through two years of the conferences, the following years' repeats of the same conference topics was uninteresting. After the large corporations started getting tons of floor space, it became even less interesting (seeing the Novell Sales Guys hype up SUSE to with absurd marketing-speak was disheartening). Now, with this statement, it becomes very clear that LinuxWorld isn't for people who like Linux for it's own sake, and I'm not sad I haven't gone for the last couple years. It's now just for people who like and admire money and large corporations, and see F/OSS and Linux as the way to get more cash. Not that that is so bad, but it isn't why I'm interested in Linux. Why not rename this conference "LinuxMoneyWorld"?

  123. :. Respect for Microsoft by Trubadur · · Score: 1

    Let me put it this way, MSFT provide just a platform for different specialized applications. If business able to run their beloved applications on more stable platform they will. So what I did when somebody calling in with offer of new software, I ask,

    -What platform does it run on?
    -Windows
    -We are not allow game platform at the workplace

    That's all what marketing department have to hear - Microsoft - should be presented as a game platform, no security, strict DRM, locked in - exactly platform for gamers.
    That would shrink their dominance really well.

    --
    :. Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface.
  124. Re:I thought OS X Linux by bblboy54 · · Score: 3, Informative

    And think about how it got to be that way. Remember when Steve Jobs came back to Apple in 1997? The most memorable moment of his keynote was hime saying microsoft doesnt have to fail for Apple to win and he called for huge respect for Microsoft. Today, Apple has grown into a huge company again.

  125. TYPICAL SUIT CRAP by Moe1975 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I am supposed to RESPECT them, after all they have done to ME, MY TRIBE, AND COUNTLESS OTHERS.

    I F'N HATE THAT BS suit game: "we rob you and cheat you, BUT we didn't POKE FUN AT YOU, so you have NO RIGHT to poke fun at US . . ."

    F*** THAT
    F*** THAT

    --
    SARAVA!
  126. Respect for M$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Solitaire - they have quite a nice implementation of solitaire.

    and it's free...

  127. Thanks by Rabid+Cougar · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's nice to know at least one person here on /. respects me.

    Sorry, I couldn't help myself!

    --
    This isn't the sig you're looking for...
  128. Strong yes, but worthy? Questionable. by lenski · · Score: 1

    The Linux community needs a "come to jesus" meeting, where we recognize the strength of worthy adversaries and study their moves, not dismiss them as unworthy of study.
    There was a time when Microsoft was simultaneously a vibrant business and supported two sets of customers: Developers on one hand, and non-developer customers on the other. After they established their well-known near-perfect penetration of the "DOS" kernel marketplace but still needed to grow (for stock/financial/business reasons), they altered the deal they had with the "developer" customers. Depending on the marketspace in which a particular developer worked, Microsoft transformed into their harshest competitor essentially without warning.

    I recognize the strength of Microsoft as a worthy adversary. I recognize that they are willing to destroy anyone that they decide stands in their way, often after that business has already been successful. There is no way I will ever hold that style of business management in anything other than absolute contempt.

    I work with Linux and remain involved in the FOSS ecosystem based on the premise that members of this community compete on the basis of their adaptability to the particular environments in which they work. We have studied Microsoft's tactics of destruction, often watching those moves blast away substantial business equity in the process. On the other hand, the FOSS community (in general) operates under the optimistic assumption that we can find viable niches, fill them, and in so doing produce both reasonable economic income and contribute to the overall progress of the industry.

    1. Re:Strong yes, but worthy? Questionable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's hilarious that the only praise the Linux/FOSS community gives MS is that its marketing is great, and that it can drive competitors out of business.

      The reality is that Windows operating systems are light-years ahead of any open source OS. The problem is that the most rabid anti-MS voices haven't actually worked on both to be able to compare. They've only done some Linux kernel hacking, and are certain that it's the best thing since sliced-bread. Seriously, has anyone else done significant work on both? If you have, are you still a Linux fan? Point is, if you've only ever seen the Linux kernel source code, then you only have half the story. (Yet, I'm sure that won't stop you from responding to my post.)

      Linux is free. Windows costs a lot of money. Yet, Windows dominates in the home, in business, and all over the world.

      Yeah, I'm *sure* it's all "marketing."

      Troll me up, Linux fanboys.

    2. Re:Strong yes, but worthy? Questionable. by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      I think it's hilarious that the only praise the Linux/FOSS community gives MS is that its marketing is great, and that it can drive competitors out of business.

      The reality is that Windows operating systems are light-years ahead of any open source OS. The problem is that the most rabid anti-MS voices haven't actually worked on both to be able to compare. They've only done some Linux kernel hacking, and are certain that it's the best thing since sliced-bread. Seriously, has anyone else done significant work on both? If you have, are you still a Linux fan? Point is, if you've only ever seen the Linux kernel source code, then you only have half the story. (Yet, I'm sure that won't stop you from responding to my post.)

      Linux is free. Windows costs a lot of money. Yet, Windows dominates in the home, in business, and all over the world.

      Yeah, I'm *sure* it's all "marketing."

      Troll me up, Linux fanboys.

      Of course it's not all marketing.

      Driving competitors out of business is also a very important part.

      And we've already admitted that.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    3. Re:Strong yes, but worthy? Questionable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Driving competitors out of business is also a very important part.
      You can't drive a competitor out of business when they are willing to give away their products. Linux has priced its product at ZERO, and yet MS dominates.

      And the fact that Windows is a far more advanced and richly-featured OS than Linux has nothing to do with it, of course.
    4. Re:Strong yes, but worthy? Questionable. by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 1

      Linux has priced its product at ZERO, and yet MS dominates.

      MS dominated well before Linux existed, at least before it existed in a consumable desktop form. This resulted in a lot of software only being available for Windows, which raises the barrier to entry for any other OS well beyond its RRP.

      Windows is a far more advanced and richly-featured OS than Linux

      Are you referring to anything in particular? The only real benefits of the Microsoft ecosystem over Linux that I see are:

      • the ease of administration Active Directory brings; as well as across-the-board "Windows Integrated Authentication" / Kerberos support. You can do the same thing in Linux, but it takes a lot more work to set it up. AD "just works", and is pretty robust. The only things that annoy me about it are a) minimum replication interval of 15 mins between sites and b) the complete and utter failure for Windows to cope with the loss of a DC until you reboot.
      • Exchange/Outlook for collaboration. This combines very well with AD.
      • Business-critical applications, e.g. our records management software, our purchase order system, and so on.

      For home users, they're pretty close in terms of feature parity. But that's largely irrelevant, because it's businesses that drive the large-scale adoption of operating systems in homes. Most people want to use whatever they use at work, or failing that, whatever their local free tech support (kids, neighbours, whatever) happen to know.

    5. Re:Strong yes, but worthy? Questionable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3 more things I can think of off the top of my head:

      - Their intranet server - Sharepoint (which is fully integrated with exchange and all the Office products)
      - Their new DFS (in Server 2008, which, admittedly, is still in the works) which ought to fix the AD woes.
      - Oh, yeah... Games.

      I mean, what else is there? It's better in business-critical applications, and that's who really matters when it comes to large-scale technology adoption. You hit the nail right on the head with your observation that AD "just works." To be honest with you, pretty much every commonly-used feature of Windows "just works," at least compared to Linux.

      For home users, Windows is much more accessible and quality tech support more available. Most people don't *want* to know more about how their computer works. They just want to be able to email aunt Marge pics of the baby and video chat with Grandpa's dog and maybe play some games.

      There's nothing wrong with that, and I think you'd be hard-pressed to argue that Linux is easier, or better, for any of these things, for the average user. Linux fan-boy-ism is simply naive sophomoric you-don't-know-what's-good-for-you crap, with some vague utopian anti-corporate sentiment thrown in, with very little actual substance.

  129. There is a difference by Azuma+Hazuki · · Score: 1

    between "respect" and "like." I respect Microsoft like I respect a psychopathic killer with a lot of money who's made his way into public office (no, not Dick Cheney). In this case, the "respect" means "understand that they're here to stay, and that they're not completely hopeless. If for no other reason than that there's no patch for human idiocy, Microsoft's marketing and cash will ensure that it stays in the market for a long time."

    --
    ~Eien no Inori wo Sasagete~ Searching for my Hatsumi...
  130. Earned and Owned by DynaSoar · · Score: 1

    Since when did a corporation's behaviors earn them a monolithic opinion? MS does some things well. It does some things that deserve ridicule. Some of those happen to coincide, but that's not germane to the argument. The fact remains that they do many things, and those things each earn them what they deserve for those specific activities.

    Precisely what should we expect from MS if we continue to ridicule it? Precisely the same that we've gotten so far. They haven't done anything significant because of ridicule. There have been some employees that responded to it, but that's not what drives corporate policy. They have actively campaigned against Linux, but only because it captures market share, not because of ridicule.

    Try an analogy on for size: Microsoft is to George W. Bush what Linux is to Jon Stewart. What has Bush done differently as a result of Stewart's ridicule? Nothing significant. He may have alluded to (a polite way to say stole from) some of Stewart's material for self-deprecating humor at the annual press dinner. That indicates he noticed it. It does not indicate it caused him to change his behavior towards Stewart or anything else. On the other hand, Stewart has made quite a name for himself for ridiculing Bush (and his entire administration). What does Linux as a community have to gain from ridiculing Microsoft? For one, rightly calling them on improper behavior. For another, increasing their own visibility. Again, some of these overlap, and again, that doesn't matter. What does Linux et al have to lose by ridiculing Microsoft? The respect of people whom they wouldn't want as part of the Linux community anyway. And when those people make their opinion known publicly Linux again stands to gain from the publicity that will attract more of the kind of people they do want to be part of the community.

    Linux will never unseat Microsoft. It is an alternative. To make it clear that's it's an alternative it should differentiate itself. Ridicule is a viable means. But when used it should be true, and there are ample instances of this. It's not the only means, and others should be used when they're more effective.

    The worst case scenario is that MS does pay attention to the ridicule, alters its corporate policy, gets its shit together and produces products that make Linux no longer a viable alternative. Linux would get owned. They have the resources. But figure the odds.

    I will give Microsoft their due. They will determine whether their due is good or bad. And I will give it according to its individual actions and products. I will not offer them a monolithic opinion because they do not act in a monolithic manner. More than anything else, I will never hold an opinion because I'm told to. That's no longer an opinion, it's dogma, and that's the last thing I'd ever hope to see from the Linux community.

    Finally, because I can't be so pedantic for so long without breaking, Microsoft is poopy heads.

    Has your Linux stopped booting? Mine either.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
  131. pretty sad. . . by abvdasker · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition." Is that the best that can be said? What's most pathetic/hilarious is that neither of those have anything to do with the actual quality of their product.

  132. Re:I thought OS X Linux by dhavleak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Aren't you guys getting a little pedantic? He didn't say OS-X "wasn't an OS" -- he said it "wasn't an OS available for general use"

    And he has a point as well -- OS-X has never been seriously positioned as a server OS like AIX, HP-UX, etc. It's not realistic to expect Apple to become a major server OS player with the machines they sell right now.

    Even on the desktop - Apples market share might be increasing but it's very hard to see them go past 10 or 20% of the market. You can argue both ways about whether that needs to be counted or not (in said duopoly).

    The reason I say Apple's share is unlikely to increase past that point: It's because they don't license OS-X for use on PCs (or create a Mac spec and license it out). That's a huge problem for the h/w industry. If Apple were to get, say, 80% of the market and for this year they only offer nVidia cards and Intel processors in their machines, well, AMD will go bankrupt. If they stick with Intel wifi chips, Atheros might go bankrupt. Basically the whole industry will have to come up with a way of ramping up and scaling down production as and when their products get selected/deselected for use in Apple's lines -- if not, the entire computer hardware industry will become a one-horse-race for any component that goes into a computer.

  133. I've never ridiculed them about that by smchris · · Score: 1

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing...."

    Never.

  134. They have done some things *well* at least. by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

    There ARE some things about Microsoft that they do well. Besides marketing, I think we'd all have to agree that Microsoft supports the majority of PC software out there better than Linux. Whether or not that is from anti-competititve processes or what, who knows.

    Is Apple better than Microsoft in this way? Seems to me that Apple has been very closed to ... competition. Especially with something like hardware and whatever. Is the actual OS better? I don't think that's really the argument at hand. Is Apple actually more friendly to OSS though?

    Lastly, Microsoft certainly has software that, at the very least, seems to have functional use. Many people use Office 2003 quite happily, Windows Server 2003.

    Is it BETTER than other software? Maybe, maybe not. It does appear to be easier to use.

    And, for the record, I've used openoffice, apache, tinkered with various servers and whatever, and Windows Server 2003 and Office 2003 are easier for the user to use.

  135. Hey, wait a minute... by cp.tar · · Score: 1

    This also requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it. "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"

    And both of these things are a sign of quality code, or what?

    The article almost had me going - right to this point, where I started laughing.

    I do, however, agree with this style of ridiculing them - what we don't say may speak louder than what we do say.

    --
    Ignore this signature. By order.
  136. Doesn't this miss the point? by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

    a good track record in fending off competition.

    That is the fundamental difference between FOSS and commerical software. A company wants the whole market to themself, as they are looking to pay their bills. FOSS says in effect, here is our program we really like it and hope you do too. But if not, use the code and modify it to do want you want. Open source isn't market greedy, everyone is making a bunch of little changes, and creating new 'products', that might suite some people better than the orginal branch of the code tree.

  137. Confusion of levels by Tom · · Score: 1

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Namely?

    Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'" Ah! No, wait. None of these are things that windos does well. These are things that Microsoft does well. Totally not the same thing.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:Confusion of levels by spyowl · · Score: 1

      I thought he was being sarcastic there. Because he did indirectly "poke fun" at Windows with those 2 sentences. Can a second source confirm that those 2 sentences were not taken out of context? And if they weren't that he was actually being serious when he said this?

  138. That's no reason to respect Microsoft by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition"

    Those are the two of the things Microsoft is most often ridiculed for. This isn't anything more than "stop making fun of microsoft because it hurts their feelings". It's the same solution that I would expect to see in elementary school. ("Alright kids, don't hurt anyone's feelings").

    --
    -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
  139. Who is Jim Zemlin? by martin-boundary · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I'm sorry, who is Jim Zemlin, and what has he produced that makes him worth listening to?

    According to this mailing list post, he's a marketing guy. Since when do we listen to marketing guys on slashdot now? Did I miss the memo or what?

    1. Re:Who is Jim Zemlin? by potsmaster · · Score: 1

      used to be the marketing manager - sorry, co-marketing veep - at covalent technologies back in the days when they decided to try to rule the world by selling apache ...

      --
      REPORT ALL OBSCENE MESSAGES TO YOUR POTSMASTER
  140. Duopoly? by Myrkridian42 · · Score: 1

    Only two? I'm insulted. Where's the "respect" for Mac?

  141. Re:Active Directory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They disagree with you so you got a troll mod. Troll used to have a meaning.

  142. The cult only has one master by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    The Linux Foundation calling for respect for Microsoft will have less than no effect.

    The only way this could happen would be if hell froze over and Stallman himself called for it. He's the only person that most of the people who are seriously into hating Microsoft will listen to. In many cases, the only reason why said people started hating Microsoft is purely because Stallman told them to, rather than because of any more logical reason.

    Get the Prophet (gag) to decree it, and his followers will listen. If anyone else tries, however, the cult will remain entirely impervious. As Jesus himself said, sheep only follow one shepherd. If another tries to lead them, they either simply do not follow, or run away, because they do not recognise a stranger's voice.

  143. So many flaws and so little time... by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    "Linux needs to recognise Microsoft's leadership in some areas to better itself, Jim Zemlin, executive director for the Linux Foundation told delegates at the Linuxworld tradeshow in San Fransisco."

    Being a leader in areas that are self serving at the expense of the world is not honorable and believe me when I say that we DO recognize this. I would be hard pressed to find ANYTHING that Microsoft has done without a anti-competition agenda driving it. It's not a nice thing to say but it is the truth.

    "As Linux has become a mainstream operating system, it is exiting the first stage of its life. The second stage requires a different strategy form the first one, said the Linux promotor."

    Really? Why? Nothing has changed with regards to Microsoft. It's still a thug corporation convicted of abusing its monopoly in more than one country. Most importantly Microsoft is COMPLETELY unrepentant.

    "Open source vendors have to recognise that Windows is here to stay and that together with Microsoft it will form a duopoly in the market for operating systems. This also requires that the Linux community respects Microsoft rather than ridicule it."

    Windows? I thought we were talking about Microsoft. The two are not synonyms. One is a monopoly operating system and the other a corporation that abuses the power that the monopoly gives it.

    Why should we stop ridiculing Microsoft? Microsoft hasn't stopped the behavior that we find offensive. When it does that's when atitudes will begin to change. Until then Microsoft can't even begin to earn our respect.

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well," Zemlin said. Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition."

    My God! Let me say it again. WINDOWS IS NOT MICROSOFT. So what does Windows do so well?? Yes, Microsoft spends a lot of money marketing the operating system but how dare you tout Microsoft's track record of "fending off competition!" There tactics have been anti-competitive and many times blaitently illegal! That's not something of which one should be proud!

    I'm not going to say that everything Microsoft does is crap. It is not their software that offends me. It's their constant and unrelenting need to utterly destroy competition by any means legal or not that I will never accept. The open source movement is a new way of doing things. It fosters a spirit of cooperation instead of the back stabbing environment that rocketed Microsoft to the top.

    Real Open Source (Not the sham "shared source" that is Microsoft's) isn't going away and Microsoft better learn to adapt or die a long slow lingering death.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  144. Respect? by ozbird · · Score: 1

    Why do I have a mental picture of "The Godfather" or "Goodfellas" when I hear a request to respect Microsoft?

    "Nice operating system you have here, Mr. Torvalds. Be a shame if anything were to happen to it."

  145. It's the code by Ashcrow · · Score: 1

    Most folks poke fun at MS not for their marketing. I'd dare say they are amazing marketeers. What they don't do well is produce stable products which are a joy to work with. Apple OS X does a great job on the desktop and Linux does an amazing job server side. Microsoft's products tend to come in at number 2 at best (in stability and sexiness).

  146. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read part of it, but Colin Powell's biography just isn't that interesting so I stopped.

  147. Heeeeere's Godwin! by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 4, Funny

    Europe, 1940s: Allied forces have to recognize that the Nazis are here to stay and that together with Hitler it will form a duopoly in the world for colonising smaller and less developed countries. This also requires that the Democratic community respects Hitler rather than ridicule him.

    1. Re:Heeeeere's Godwin! by QuietObserver · · Score: 1

      Not to detract from your fine comment, but your time frame is a little off. Germany invaded Poland in 1939, though in all fairness, Neville Chamberlain didn't kill his political career until 1940, so you're at least partially correct. The war in question ended in 1945. As I said, however, your comment was well constructed.

    2. Re:Heeeeere's Godwin! by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if this will help the analogy and if it points to other parallels, but there's an important historical context to WW2. Hitler and the Nazis were extremely anti-communist at the outset, so there was some sympathy for them, some looking the other way, even some approval among other anti-communists. They really were considered the lesser of two evils in some quarters, and even after the war some felt that we should have sided with Germany against the Soviet Union (if only the Nazis hadn't been so regrettably anti-semitic, don't you know?).

      Another wrinkle is that Hitler and Stalin made a secret pact before the invasion of Poland. The Soviets got half of Poland! (And all of it after the War due to Truman's missteps, but that's another story.) It wasn't until after Germany's surprise invasion of the Soviet Union in June of 1941 that Stalin joined the alliance. (Has Bill made a secret alliance with RMS* to, uh, invade Sun? =) Hmmmm, and does that make Jobs Churchill or Roosevelt?)

      Anyway, back to the main point. A partial reason that Hitler wasn't completely opposed from the outset and perhaps even encouraged to re-arm Germany in the 1930s was the hope that he would either provide a bastion against communism or even outright attack the Soviet Union. Although he did the latter, it wasn't until after he'd already conquered most of Europe.

      *I used RMS instead of Linus because I just don't see Linus as the Stalin type, while it seems to fit RMS pretty well. Maybe Linus is Trotsky. If so, he should avoid Mexico City and ice picks.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    3. Re:Heeeeere's Godwin! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Europe, 1940s: Allied forces have to recognize that the Nazis are here to stay and that together with Hitler it will form a duopoly in the world for colonising smaller and less developed countries. This also requires that the Democratic community respects Hitler rather than ridicule him.
      Modded "Funny" - I'd say this is a hellofa lot more Insightful than funny.
  148. Re:Active Directory by MicrosoftElitist · · Score: 0

    I won't comment on Sun because I honestly don't know anything about their directory services.

    Novell, well I know that they had an excellent product back in the day when I was administering 4.X, however, their marketing department or should I say lack thereof ruined them. If you mention Novell to most people anymore you get a blank expression usually. Nov.... what?

  149. Re:In a word: YOU'RE FULL OF IT - "Show me" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Prove it then... take this challenge:

    http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=267219&c id=20198711

    "The worlds most secure operating system" should not be susceptible to 95% of the worlds malware and viruses" - by realdodgeman (1113225) on Saturday August 11, @08:52PM (#20199199)

    Well, there IS that "other 5%", & WHAT ARE THEY FOUND ON?

    *NIX's, perhaps??

    Then, the percentage of 'dominance to subordinate' for usage of Windows over *NIX's is in proportion too, isn't it???

    I.E.-> "95% of the world's computers from home environs to business ones DO RUN WINDOWS"... commonly acknowledged fact!

    (And, when you're as popular as Windows is? You get targetted - & this concept ONLY MAKES SENSE FOR VIRUS WRITERS TO TARGET THE MOST USED PLATFORM, for greater surface area of attack!)

    However, "security by obscurity", in *NIX's being less used on PC's????

    That is not much of a thing to brag about, nor is it truly security - hence, the "remaining 5% of virus'" running on them are on *NIX variants... in keeping with their % of proportion of the PC market & how much of it really uses *NIX variants as well.

    "Nor should it have a password hashing standard that can be broken in less than 20 minutes." - by realdodgeman (1113225) on Saturday August 11, @08:52PM (#20199199)

    Do you think that cannot be done on other systems? Hey - come on!

    (And, I can break it faster using NTLocksmith, & tools by SysInternals to automate doing work on SAM copies between machines too (manual way)).

    " And it should not bug the user with questions for "extra security"" - by realdodgeman (1113225) on Saturday August 11, @08:52PM (#20199199)

    Do you mean VISTA's "UAC"? I agree!

    HOWEVER? It can be turned off, & with assuredness/confidence that you are secure!

    How?? Well, simply by following what is in this "12 step easy" program list for securing a modern Windows PC using a modern Windows NT-based OS variant (2000/XP/Server 2003):

    APK "12 step program" 4 a secure Windows NT-based OS (2000/XP/Server 2003/VISTA):

    http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?s=3e7 8ea52bc119fb94a59e51abf7c47a5&p=375355#post375355

    AND, after applying its tricks/tips/techniques, you really never have to worry about virus/trojan/malware/worm/etc. et al, & be secure online also, on a Windows based OS.

    APK

    P.S.=> Which all, of course, leads to my challenge to yourself, & ANY *NIX person to run the multiplatform CIS Tool, noted by SANS & COMPUTERWORLD AS LEGIT & DECENT, in the 1st url I posted here to you... download CIS Tool, install & RUN IT, + post your score there... go for it! I will post my score obtained on Windows (tests common areas to both OS types, *NIX's & Windows) after & we can compare...

    OTHERWISE? All I hear is all this "(Insert *NIX variant here) is more secure than Windows", but NO PROOF... just "hot air & hearsay"... apk

  150. what MS does well... by theheadlessrabbit · · Score: 1

    "There are some things that Windows does pretty well" Windows certainly does prove that a company CAN compete with 'free' someone should go tell the RIAA to look at how Microsoft runs things. You can make money, even when a superior, and free alternative exists.

    --
    -I only code in BASIC.-
  151. Ethics is always important by microbox · · Score: 1

    If you can be ethical too, good for you, but ethical doesn't tend to work against an unethical opponent. Try winning a fair fight against a guy who is willing to kick you in the crotch and throw sand in your face some time.

    There I have to disagree. When you throw ethics out, it becomes a race to the bottom, and creates extreme suffering. Ethics is about considering the consequences of your actions, which is sanity. If you find yourself squared off against a psychotic self-centred lunitic who's going to kick you in the crotch, and throw sand in your face... well, best to question how you came across that situation in the first place. If the situation was not your own doing, then best to let your confused friend sort himself out, instead of trying to "save the world" by "destroying him". Voilence begets voilenace, as they say, however, this can be extended in many ways. For example: ethics begets ethics. How do you think we arrived in the society we have today without ethics? It's not all bad... that would be some place like North Korea, which I'm sure is far better then some of the deptotisms of our history.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  152. sounds to me like by alizard · · Score: 1

    "Jim Zemlin (executive director for the Linux Foundation) gave a talk at LinuxWorld saying that the open source community should stop poking fun at Microsoft.


    the Linux Foundation needs a new executive director.
  153. Disrespect is a weapon! by DJ_Perl · · Score: 1
    "Ender's Game" is an excellent book, and those are very cogent quotes. You can love and transcend Steve Ballmer all you want. You can create a lofty cosmology in which Ballmer is just another "you" in your head. But if one of me was lying as blatantly as Ballmer, wouldn't I want to get me to tell the truth? The beauty of the company is that it cloaks individual liars. It's no longer just Steve Ballmer telling lies, it is a Microsoft's corporate action. The following quote from Huxley is very applicable to Microsoft as well.

    One of the great attractions of patriotism - it fulfills our worst wishes. In the person of our nation we are able, vicariously, to bully and cheat. Bully and cheat, what's more, with a feeling that we are profoundly virtuous. -- Aldous Huxley Q: What's the difference between Ken Lay and Steve Ballmer?
    A: Ken Lay bungled.
    People admire Microsoft for one reason only -- Microsoft made money. I wish I could make money, so I blindly admire Microsoft.
    Microsoft's goal -- more money for Microsoft! Free Software Foundation's goal -- better software for everybody!
    Sure, it sounds all macho to fight an enemy who doesn't fight fair. But why have enemies at all? If you truly knew your enemy as yourself, there would be no enemies, and nobody to fight. Shouldn't we all simply be making better software?
    That said, disrespect is a weapon of the underdog. Nothing gets a company's goat as much as bad PR. I ask more more disrespect for Microsoft. I urge Microsoft employees to start questioning their leader's ethics. It should no longer be enough to keep blinders on, go to work at Microsoft, get paid, and feel justified. One needs to start thinking -- is my leader a person of integrity? Are they willing to tell the truth? Or is my leader an amoralist tough, who will lie, loudly, for the sake of money?
    --
    -- Subvert the dominant paradigm. Repeat as desired. http://ownlifeful.com/
  154. Difficult, not impossible. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    I believe it is actually possible to survive with very little nitrogen or none at all -- just oxygen -- but I could be entirely wrong about that.

    Microsoft, however, is much easier.

    Not easy, I know. I'm applying for a job with a place which relies on a few apps that are Windows-only, and not likely to be ported. It's a pretty much entirely-Microsoft shop -- they use Visual Studio (and also some variant of Eclipse, for other things), and the only Linux in the office is in the HD-DVD simulator box.

    But at the same time, I run Linux at home, on my own servers, and in some other mostly-Microsoft places I've had contract work -- in little dedicated servers, but such that I don't have to deal with Windows much. And I have worked with a community project which uses entirely open software -- Ubuntu on the desktop, FreeBSD on the server -- and refuses to use any proprietary software, to the extent that they can help it. To my knowledge, the only evidence that they're even aware of Windows is they provide instructions on how to connect to their radio with WinAMP -- but they also provide instructions for xmms on Linux, among other things.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:Difficult, not impossible. by honor,+not+armor · · Score: 1

      I believe the GP is referring to the abundance of nitrogen gas in the atmosphere - nearly 80%. It's not a question of how to survive without it, but rather how to avoid it.

  155. Their greatest weakness is FUD by Almahtar · · Score: 1

    ... which equates to slander (at least by honest people, but not by the letter of the law).

    They win continually by talking trash.

    On top of that they are paying students at universities to advocate their stuff (I forget the name of the program, but I refused to be a part of it), and they pay untold crazy amounts of cash for positive marketing.

    All Linux has to fight that with is to counter Microsoft's FUD (AKA talking trash, often misconstrued as disrespect) and advocate open source at the grass roots level.

    Next time you see an open source zealot denouncing Microsoft or promoting open source, don't look at them as off base. They're not distorting fact any more than Microsoft's marketing team, they're just doing it for free because they believe in a cause. I don't see how a paid-for study or banner on a web site gives Microsoft any more credibility, but apparently many people think it does.

  156. Jim Zemlin Responds... by Ferret55 · · Score: 1

    I actually posted an email to one of the linux foundation's mailing lists and got this reply from Jim Zemlin. Seems he also hates microsoft and respects them like he would a gweat big gwisowy bear, he clarified to me that he was not, in fact fawning over microsoft.

    From : Jim Zemlin
    Sent : Sunday, 12 August 2007 4:14:23 AM
    To : .............@hotmail.com
    Subject : re: s the left hand watching the right?

    Simon,

    Thanks for the e-mail. While I disagree that I have alienated thousands of supporters, I do want to respond to your concern and be very clear on my message:

    If we want to beat Microsoft we should respect them as a competitor.

    To be even more clear:

    I don't like their software. I don't like their business practices in many cases. I don't like the FUD they spread about Linux. I don't like their software license. I don't like their development methods.

    Here are a few quotes that mirror my thoughts:

    "You can't defeat a powerful enemy unless you understand him completely, and you can't understand him unless you know the desires of his heart, and you can't know the desires of his heart until you truly love him. Hiding from your enemy is the same as letting him win."

    - Seventh Son

    "To know your Enemy, you must become your Enemy. Know your enemy and know yourself, find naught in fear for 100 battles. Know yourself but not your enemy, find level of loss and victory. Know thy enemy but not yourself, wallow in defeat every time."

    Sun Tzu

    I think it's clear that you must respect your enemy to effectively compete against them. If you don't respect that Microsoft has a great marketing, legal & business development department, you aren't going to get far. Know your enemy, understand them, respect them--only then can you become greater than them.

    Jim

    >An article linked through slashdot has made alot of linux users angry about comments made by Jim Zemlin in a San Francisco confrence. I for one >agree, I hope you guys are ready for some fallout, because whoever you put on the poduium didn't sound like a representative of the linux >community, they simply sounded (or were quoted to be precise) like they were another paid microsoft puppet or an astroturfed organisation. In my >opinion, these comments completely undermined and sabotaged any trust or confidence you may have been trying to garner in your organisation. Well >done, you have effectively alienated thousands of (potential)supporters in one fell swoop.

  157. Oblig... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Your faith in your friends is yours.
    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  158. Sometimes the tech. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Ian Carmack made an observation about DirectX 10 and Microsoft in general -- they rush things to market, do their corporate bullying to ensure that their product dominates, but it sucks for a long time.

    Then, eventually, either on their own or directly as a result of outside pressure, they make it better.

    They do, in fact, have the developers and resources to make the best tech available anywhere, to really innovate, to, in short, do all the things they claim to do.

    But unless you force them to, they're going to give you the worst product they can possibly sell.

    Windows sucked until Windows 2000, and probably still sucked for a few years after that. XP sucked until service pack 2. Visual Studio sucked for years and years. DirectX used to suck, then it was sort of a big fat "meh" between DirectX and OpenGL/SDL, with the only concrete difference being that GL is cross-platform and DirectX is Windows-only -- and now, finally, DirectX is starting to be good enough that if you're developing a Windows-only game, it actually makes sense to do DirectX instead of OpenGL.

    And so on and so forth.

    This, folks, is why I don't mind Apple's proprietary stuff so much. Apple much more often adds features and functionality, or even fixes broken stuff, just to make a better product, and not because they "have to" -- although this may be due to market pressure from Microsoft so that Apple's products have to be perfect or better. But whatever the reason, I can usually live with a Mac, and I usually cannot live with a Windows box.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  159. Re:I thought OS X Linux by nospam007 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft for instance has excelled in marketing the operating system, and has a good track record in fending off competition.'"
    --
    Any mob boss has the same quality, fend off competition and marketing your own.

  160. WOW by WeeBit · · Score: 1

    Say it isn't so Jim! You don't lay in bed with your rival, you always keep notes on your rival, you never turn your back on your rival. BTW... They teach this in business school.

  161. Time to knock your stats premise, dead, lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "No, statistics are." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Sunday August 12, @12:38AM (#20200365)

    No stats aren't - they have 1 weakness:

    The fact they're based on sample sets, which can be skewed! I took enough of them in academia (stats 1 & 2) to know this much.

    Get ready for some sarcasm, but based on numbers:

    (LOL! It's like testing any *NIX share of market out there running, vs. Windows' share of it! That is what? 90-95% of it??)

    Yea, the stats ARE skewed alright, but IN A GOOD WAY: In favor of Windows, legitimately, on any account.

    Virus/malware/trojans/adware etc. et al, 90% someone here stated earlier, run on Windows, right?

    Aha!

    About the same as the market share WINDOWS ENJOYS!

    (... & thus, PLUS, a greater surface area to work on too, for job employment prospects)

    I.E. -> Someone has to be there to "turn the wrenches" so to speak, you can't outsource that out of your state, like working on automobiles, if you're smart (FOR COSTS!)

    So network engineers/techs have jobs (you boys ought to thank YOUR STARS for virus & such - they keep YOU WORKING, on the widest used platform, hence the whole "job thing" entering the picture & computers really are everywhere now & sooner OR later, someone has to be there to "turn the screwdrivers" etc.)

    SO BY WAY OF COMPARISON?

    That leaves 5% of the market, per the parent poster's statement of "90% of the world's virus run on Windows" etc...

    HEY, look! Again, about the marketshare & worldwide use %'age of 5% *NIX has on the world's PC's...

    Argue with the numbers, & end of subject.

    APK

    1. Re:Time to knock your stats premise, dead, lol by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      First, the 90% was pulled out of someone's ass. I hope it wasn't mine, I don't remember.

      Second, if Linux has 5% marketshare, fine, it also has close to NO viruses. The last time I bothered to look, there had been a grand total of two worms for ANY Unix, EVER, Linux included. Maybe now it's up to five!

      Arguing viruses as a good thing? Maybe so, but that does not make Windows a more secure platform, even if it makes it better job security for you.

      You do have a couple of almost-decent points:

      The fact they're based on sample sets, which can be skewed!

      That is true, so you have to look at how they are skewed.

      For instance, how is market share determined? How about total number of viruses? Vulnerabilities, etc?

      Every time a statistical study is posted to Slashdot, we get a ton of comments about how it might be flawed, or how we know it's flawed. I invite you to find a statistical study that backs your claim, and I'll punch holes in it. Or I'll pick one that backs my claim, and you can punch holes in that.

      But "arguing with numbers" strikes me as quite a lot better than downloading one test suite, because it at least eliminates a few major ways in which that suite could be skewed:

      • The test you propose comes with no source code, and so it may be biased by the organization putting it out. Public studies must name their sources to be credible, so at least if it's biased, we know it.
      • The test you propose requires some amount of work to participate in, meaning it's a self-selected survey. Public studies need not be self-selected.
      • Regarding self-selection: The only incentive to take your test is to get you to shut the hell up. Self-selected surveys often provide incentives, and sometimes, being able to write an opinion is incentive enough. But I can write all the opinion I want without taking your test.
      • The test you propose has only your own screenshot as "proof". Public studies can actually be verified, and usually are verified, by more than one source.
      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    2. Re:Time to knock your stats premise, dead, lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh man... quit trying to change the subject (CIS TOOL, you bullshitter)....

      Try to beat my score on the CIS Tool multiplatform test of security on the *NIX of your choice (yours, that lol, you don't even fully understand, per the URL below, where you didn't even KNOW it has SeLinux "baked into it")...

      Simple!

      (Evidently NOT so simple, because using & learning SeLinux intricacies is beyond you, by your own words no less... & you'd NEED SeLinux in place to exceed my score on Windows Server 2003 SP #2 fully currently hotfixed patched & security-hardened of 84.735/100 that I got using it, vs. ANY *NIX PERSON on the *NIX of their choice no less (too bad they ALL run & evade taking this test, as you do!)).

      No matter HOW you try to "change the subject" here (which is about CIS TOOL) with your b.s., & trying to waste my time, yours, & those of others reading here?

      YOU ARE RUNNING!

      (And your "MAIN OBJECTION" has been overcome, & that was this test is "malware" possibly? SANS + COMPUTERWORLD, sites often referred to here @ /., no less? Said QUITE otherwise!)

      This b.s. above is just another shitty attempt @ an evasion on YOUR part, in taking this multiplatform valid test of security is all, period. So obvious too...

      (... & SANS + COMPUTERWORLD noted it is no malware, & IF ANYTHING, it is "anti-malware" because it helps you secure yourself! & They are a BIT MORE VALID OF AN AUTHORITY THAN YOU ARE IN THIS FIELD)

      Especially based on your mistakes below in the url I am going to post:

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=264303&thresho ld=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&cid=20219969

      Answer those questions there, while you are @ it, quit avoiding them...

      That, or just take the CIS TOOL multiplatform test of security, noted by SANS & COMPUTERWORLD NO LESS, & post an unfaked photo (which you also insinuated you'd do, posting a faked image... give us a break, you BULLSHITTER!)... lol!

      APK

      P.S.=> Another pitiful evasion making, subject changing, coward from the *NIX world, in SanityInAnarchy... quit wasting MY time, yours, & anyone else reading "chicken man"... take the test, & answer my questions (vs. your mistakes & further b.s.) in the url I posted also... apk

  162. Re:Dude, put down the books. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, put down the literature and step outside for a minute.

  163. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Jeremy_Bee · · Score: 1

    While you say some smart things here, your also showing a huge bias. Mac OS-X, (like all the Unixes), is closer to being a "real" OS than Linux or Windows and the statement "available for general use" is purposely inflammatory so what did you expect would happen to a comment like that?

    OS-X server hardware is not the very best, but it's obviously much more than serviceable. I work at a major University where entire faculties encompassing thousands of users (including my own) run exclusively on Mac hardware, (and it's not just the arts in case that's what you're thinking). I notice you completely avoid the mention of Apple X-Serves and RAIDs etc.

    Also, your argument about licensing out the Mac OS has been shot down so many times I won't even bother to get into it. Suffice to say you should just Google the topic and read a few of the many pages that explode that theory in detail.

    So while you make a few good points, you seem woefully uninformed for the most part and biased in general. OS-X is certainly not the best server operating system out there yet, but it's arguably the best desktop operating system, and one with a very strong, if not dominant server presence as well. Dissing it as "not a real OS" or "not available for general use" is an exaggeration at best, or really just a troll.

    If I wasn't already commenting on this thread I would moderate the parent as such.

  164. Maybe there is more to it than "just works" by cumin · · Score: 1

    I'd say that there are three important issues that are overlooked from this perspective.

    • You get what you pay for - It comes with the computer at no additional cost, but has cost otherwise - for your average consumer this is a point in favor of getting Windows with their new computer. In the common marketplace when you have to pay for something it actually has more value than something that you can get for free. To your average inexperienced computer user that means that getting Windows with their computer is a better value than getting it with Linux. If they had to pay more for Ubuntu with the new desktop by $10, you might actually see more sales of Ubuntu Dells.
    • The bandwagon effect - If everybody else is using something, there must be a good reason. Typically I'm not a crowd follower but most people are. In some circumstances it is even a good idea to follow the crowd. If I'm comparing two similar software products and don't have a good reason to choose one over the other based on software alone or support, I'll probably go with the more used product because there is a good chance I can find forum comments and people to chat with if I need help. It works in traffic too. If everybody seems to be stopping and people are trying hard to get to an exit, then I will try to do the same even if I don't know what is ahead because there is a good chance those people exiting know something I don't.
    • Rebels and hackers use Linux - This is probably the most overlooked issue for Linux desktop adoption. Hackers use Linux because they can do what they want with it and if you hear about hackers in the news using Linux it makes it seem like something people use for evil more than they do for good. Sure, the news website you visit may be using Apache on SUSE and written by a journalist using Red Hat, but that isn't the headline. The Linux community also has a comparably high percentage of rebels because rebels want to be different and Linux gives them a way to do that. This means that there are far more sarcastic, critical and cynical users of Linux in the same size pool than there would be Windows users. The common man is influenced by this perception so much that most of the people I know who aren't Linux users, but know what it is, see it as just a thing that is used by the kind of people they don't want to be like. They would accept that Linux appreciation is "naive sophomoric you-don't-know-what's-good-for-you crap, with some vague utopian anti-corporate sentiment thrown in," without further consideration.

    Microsoft doesn't have to do anything at all to be seen as the preferable OS due to these factors to the majority of buyers, but they spend a good deal on marketing their software anyway. They have the cash to spend and typically Linux doesn't so the misconceptions are unlikely to fade away. I'm actually happy about the Novell deal, though guardedly so, because for a lot of people it will legitimize the Linux PC as an alternative for smart people rather than something for misfits and eggheads.

    As for me, I use Linux, BSD, Windows and Unix. I accept the strengths and weaknesses of each. I call myself a Linux user because it is what I use on my PC when I have a choice and I prefer to administer Linux servers. It isn't because Linux is innately better for everything, but because on my PC it is easier to customize to my taste. I use it on servers that are providing web services because they are easy to keep secure while still being easy to configure and work on. I use BSD where I have no need to regularly make changes or very limited resources, Unix on those systems that need enterprise level stability, security, and support, and Windows where I need software that won't work on anything else.

    Do I respect MS software? Sure, I appreciate that their software does what I expect it to as well as I expect it to most of the time. The bar isn't that high. It's not worth the price tag to me most of the time, so I don't advocate it. Do I respect MS support? Yes, their support is p

    --
    Back in my day when we chiseled our bits into stone and sent them by mule train from village to village...
  165. I'll respect Microsoft when... by cumin · · Score: 1

    I respect their software somewhat. I use Outlook, Word and Excel at work. They work about as well as I expect them to, but then the bar isn't really that high. I'll respect Windows when being Administrator is only necessary when I really need to administer the OS, when they replace the registry with something coherent and reliable, when they adopt a decent filesystem (ext3, xfs, jfs or zfs spring to mind, but maybe WinFS will work,) and when I can set up a server and leave it the heck alone for 60 days without worrying that I've got a dozen serious unpatched vulnerabilities. And don't give me that auto-update crap either unless you found some way to use it without going in some morning to find out that your critical systems mysteriously stopped working.

    --
    Back in my day when we chiseled our bits into stone and sent them by mule train from village to village...
  166. why? by samantha · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why should the Linux Foundation be counseling respect for an organization that has for years smeared Linux at every opportunity and has stated that it considers F/OSS generally un-American? Microsoft has done and has stated it intends to keep doing all in its power to bring FOSS down wherever it can. Frankly I think the Foundation should be called to task for such a treasonous pronoucement.

  167. Re:I thought OS X Linux by shaitand · · Score: 3, Informative

    'Mac OS-X, (like all the Unixes), is closer to being a "real" OS than Linux or Windows'

    In what world? Perhaps you have some sort of strange unspoken defintion of "real" the rest of us aren't using? OSX isn't an operating system at all. The operating system is Darwin (its kernel to be technical) and the distribution that is based on that operating system is OSX. Linux is a real and complete operating system and there are many distributions based on it. Windows is both an operating system and a distribution.

    'Dissing it as "not a real OS" or "not available for general use" is an exaggeration at best, or really just a troll.'

    I wouldn't really go around saying it isn't a real OS (technical distinctions aside) but 'not available for general use' certainly applies. Most of us define general use for an operating system as 'general use on commodity hardware'.

    'Also, your argument about licensing out the Mac OS has been shot down so many times I won't even bother to get into it.'

    It's been discussed anyway. I'm pretty sure the only ones who walk away feeling it was shut down were those who felt that way from the get go.

    'you seem woefully... biased in general. OS-X is... arguably the best desktop operating system'

    Perhaps you should consider yourself before saying others are biased. OSX being the best desktop operating system is something that MOST informed individuals would dispute (I don't give my own opinion because its beside the point).

    Like it or not, not everyone who makes a negative comment about MacOS, Mac's, or Apple is a troll and this is an open forum where people are entitled to think OSX, Linux, or Windows sucks. If you are modding people down simply because they think your pet system sucks you are abusing moderation privs. In fact, if you (or anyone) are modding people down for any reason you are probably using the moderation system incorrectly. Moderation is primarily intended for modding up worthwhile comments, not censoring comments you feel unworthy.

  168. "STAT2", lol... take a read! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If you want to compare security, collect data on actual attacks and compromises. And as the other poster says, Windows has been compromised far more than we'd like, even considering its market share." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Sunday August 12, @12:38AM (#20200365)

    Of course - this shows you are not some "hacker/cracker" type thief, which is good though, in that, you personally don't THINK how they do from what you're saying now... & what is that?

    Well, a serious "hacker/cracker" is into "industrial espionage", & "information stealing" for profit, who wants to make MONEY @ it!!!

    How to do that, with computers? The EASIEST way/path of least resistance??

    SIMPLE - Attack the most used platform there is: Windows, where 95% of the world's PC's are today, where the MOST POTENTIAL SUCKERS ARE (heck, they're even doing it via phishing & email scams, proving my point)...


    2 good things comes of it though, imo:

    1.) Not only do the "evil machinations" of malware/spyware/virus/trojan-wares keep network techies in jobs, working to fix their attacks, LOCALLY (employment in doing so)... BUT, in the LONG HAUL?

    2.) Those same "hacker/cracker" types are getting their attack surface areas ROBBED by techniques like I list in this URL below, @ a client node/single user computer level:

    APK "12 step program" 4 a secure Windows NT-based OS (2000/XP/Server 2003/VISTA):

    http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?s=3e7 8ea52bc119fb94a59e51abf7c47a5&p=375355#post375355

    (... & also by patches by MS & soon, IPv6 as well, in even more things like the INTEL IXP1200 technology I was involved in as a programmer for a partner of Network Associates for, & IT WORKS + more in the world of security, learning all the time & getting BETTER @ it, CONSTANTLY!)

    I.E.-> Hacker/Cracker machinations, once discovered OR USED & reverse engineered? ARE DOING THE WORLD A FAVOR, SPOTTING A WEAKNESS & THUS, FORCING IMPROVEMENTS VIA PATCHES OEM'S LIKE MS & ALL OTHERS CAN & DO HAVE TO ISSUE! Heck, they're the world's best security researchers, really... THINK ABOUT IT!

    I think that in 5-7 years time in fact, you will see almost NO OS or BROWSER LEVEL/APPLICATION LEVEL attacks anymore (& coders are becoming aware of GOOD defensive coding too, more & more), ala:

    Code Auditing the Defcon Way:

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=158231&cid= 13257227

    As well!

    Folks on the "GOOD SIDE OF THINGS" are learning & making progress against an essentially invisible enemy that had one advantage: It is EASY to destroy, quite another to create, & thus: THE DUAL ADVANTAGES OF SURPRISE, & EASE OF DESTRUCTIVE ACTION VS. CREATIVE.

    ----

    Plus, my correllary in my posts now are correct (& there is a definite correlation between Windows usage % dominance worldwide & how many virus/malware/spyware/trojans etc. et al run on it (BOTH = 95%!))...

    My correllary also about *NIX? Correct it seems as well (equal proportions yet again)!

    It states that 5% of remaining virus/malware/spyware/trojans etc. et al out there, are running on *NIX platforms is correct as well, & how much of the PC market it owns as well, & NOT by coincidence.

    APK

    Take your typical botnet. How many of its nodes are Windows? How many botnets are entirely Windows-based? How many have ANY Linux or OS X nodes?

    1. Re:"STAT2", lol... take a read! by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Well, a serious "hacker/cracker" is into "industrial espionage", & "information stealing" for profit, who wants to make MONEY @ it!!!

      Apache, at least, enjoys quite a bit of market share, and Linux is probably still at at least 20-30%, if not 50% of web servers.

      It may still be a smaller target than desktop Windows, but the fact that it has had close to ZERO compromises in the wild, even with a decent amount of marketshare on the server, says something about its security.

      2.) Those same "hacker/cracker" types are getting their attack surface areas ROBBED by techniques like I list in this URL below

      Sorry, not by much. I imagine you've gotten about as many people to lock down their systems as I've gotten people to switch to Linux.

      No, what's really causing problems is that Microsoft is finally starting to develop secure software. Starting to -- I don't think they're quite there yet, but we'll see.

      once discovered OR USED & reverse engineered? ARE DOING THE WORLD A FAVOR

      This is a truly moronic statement. If there were no "Hacker/Crackers" in the world, wouldn't there also be no need for security?

      That's like saying the terrorists did us a favor on 9/11 by forcing us to tighten airport security. Sorry, but no -- I truly hope that we, as a species, have evolved to the point where we can tighten airport security (at least as much as we need to) without somebody having to die first.

      But consider: Suppose I were to discover a flaw in an open source project. I can fix it myself, maybe even get a bounty for it, but in the absolute worst case, I've made my own system more secure.

      Now, suppose I were to discover a flaw in Windows. I can't reasonably fix it myself, all I can do is tell Microsoft about it -- and Microsoft has been known to sit on this kind of report for months without doing anything about it. I could get the flaw fixed faster -- and make a little money on the side -- by creating a botnet with it.

      I don't actually do either of these things, though I am sure you're going to imply that I implied that I have or will. I'm just pointing out, perhaps one reason security is better on Linux isn't even because of the actual tech, but because of the way in which we deal with security holes.

      I think that in 5-7 years time in fact, you will see almost NO OS or BROWSER LEVEL/APPLICATION LEVEL attacks anymore

      I think that's half bullshit.

      OS-level attacks may not happen anymore, if by "os-level" you mean things like ping-of-death. I also doubt there will be many attacks in which something escapes the browser and attacks the rest of the user's own system.

      However, I think we'll see just as many stupid application-level attacks, because there will be stupid applications out there -- we just won't see as many against Microsoft's own products, because they have to keep getting better, so they can keep saying we're "more secure [than we were two years ago]" and keep people from migrating to other systems. I believe we'll also see far more attacks of the cross-site variety -- as in, one script running in the browser attacking another script running in the browser.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  169. Re:I thought OS X Linux by byolinux · · Score: 1

    I thought XNU was the kernel (aka Linux) and Darwin was the OS (aka GNU)

  170. Re:Active Directory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Er, hate to break it to you, but Active Directory since Win2K IS LDAP and Kerberos. There's a couple of things like the weak default ticket encryption type used for Kerberos, and the lack of default SSL encryption for LDAP lookups, but the Open Source world would do well to make an open source of equivilent that is as easy to set up and join computers to.

    On that note, I probably wouldn't bother deploying Sun or Novell's directory services anyway. If I have to choose between three propietry closed source directory services, I may as well go with the one that's the most used.

  171. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Other poster overreacted a bit. I wouldn't go so far as to say that you're biased, but I will say that you hold some very common misperceptions about Apple's suitability for the Enterprise. However, there is a basis for this perception, and it's not really that far off the mark, and further, Apple has not done much to counter this perception.

    John Siracusa recently wrote an interesting bit about why this is so. His basic thesis is Apple has not made headway in the Enterprise because it focuses all its efforts on the end user, and focuses its marketing on the enduser. To make real headway in the Enterprise, one needs to focus on the IT department, whose needs, constraints, and goals are often very different from the end user.

    You can rattle off a list of things that Apple does not do that makes its products and services a poor fit for corporate IT, and this list has not changed for years. [my emphasis]

    Siracusa also notes that in the case where the IT department is the end user, Apple develops products and markets them to the IT department as if the IT department were the end user. Check out the Apple web page for IT professionals.

    One thing worth mentioning about the suitability of Apple technology for running servers. Apple technology is used to run both Apple's website and iTunes, neither of which are what anyone could call light weight. Granted, Apple has to eat its own dog food, but didn't Dell run it's website for a while on WebObjects? And they had to make a painful transition over the MS technology at the behest of Redmond?

    Anyway, I said at the outset that you held a common misperception, but I hopefully made clear the qualifications on that statement. You are partially right about Apple vis-a-vis the Enterprise and partly wrong. Also, in the case of an IT department that is very focused on the end user as customer (usually the focus is on management being the customer; the endusers aren't signing the checks), Apple might be a good fit. Read the article. It's not very long.
    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  172. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Informative
    Hey, I was looking for the proper place to make this exact comment. I also really like Linus' take:

    CW: Microsoft has recently claimed that free software and some e-mail programs violate 235 of its patents. But Microsoft also said it won't sue for now. Is this the start of a new legal nightmare?

    Torvalds: I personally think it's mainly another shot in the FUD [fear, uncertainty and doubt] war. MS has a really hard time competing on technical merit, and they traditionally have instead tried to compete on price, but that obviously doesn't work either, not against open source. So they'll continue to bundle packages and live off the inertia of the marketplace, but they want to feed that inertia with FUD.

    CW: Do you think you and the open-source software community are prepared for this battle?

    Torvalds: I don't actually see it as a battle. I do my thing because I think it's interesting and worth doing, and I'm not in it because of any anti-MS issues. I've used a few MS products over the years, but I've never had a strong antipathy against them. Microsoft simply isn't interesting to me.

    And the whole open source thing is not an anti-MS movement either. ... Open source is a model for how to do things, and I happen to believe that it's just a much better way to do things and that open source will take over not because of any battle, but simply because better ways of doing things eventually just replace the inferior things. [my emphasis]

    Bottom line is that ones energies are much better focused on creating a great product, and not fighting a battle. Personally, I think the firebrands and the rabid dogs on either side of the MS/FSF debate just get off on the emotional charge of being outraged or are manipulating others with it. You see this sort of stuff a lot in politics. (Oh, and, what's the last program RMS wrote and how long ago? That should provide a nice outrage high for one of our friendly rabid freetards.)
    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  173. Duopoly? Can't have that by rhyre417 · · Score: 1

    I'm glad there are multiple GNU/Linux and *BSD-derived systems out there.
    The real duopoly is in the philosphy: closed-source and open-source.
    You have so many implementations that you have real choice where it counts, in the implementation.
    Real duopolies aren't that much better than monopolies, though.

  174. I do not respect a company that .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

    I do not respect a company that gets it's paid shills in the media to refer to Open Source people as zealots and 'lintards'.

    "This is a matter of leadership - for us to recognise that the world some times does see open source or open source licences as risky"

    Only when the world is being fed lies by the self same SCO/Baystar/MS ..

    "He also pointed out that many firms shy away from participating on open source mailing lists because discussions there tend to explode into flame wars "

    Given that most online forums are infested with paid for or otherwise astroturfers and shills it's not surprising that things decend into flame wars. Anyone who puts forward an opinion that MS product is less then steller is duely targeted with abuse. The response being then used to paint the 'Lintards' in a bad light.

    For an example take Rob 'SCO' Enderle ..

    'many Linux supporters are a bunch of potty-mouthed malcontents. Enterprises are better off staying away from Linux and open source'

    'I have a hard time seeing the Zealots as any different from terrorist .. I strongly believe that if September 11 showed us anything, it was that zealots'

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  175. Money attracts ... by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    people who are hungry for money.

    Hungry people who don't know that money only buys (the equivalent of) a Big Mac also tend to be attracted by money.

    There is something to be said for hunger, I suppose. Hunger motivates people to get _something_ out the door.

    As for all the "leading edge" stuff that Microsoft is doing, I'll be awfully surprised if Microsoft ever turns out anything but mock-ups of yesterday's leading-edge dreams of famous professors, filtered through the minds of their students who were best adept at regurgitating those dreams on the tests.

    The first time I hated Microsoft was back in 1987 or so when I tried to use a C function pointer according to the description in the manual, without reading all the caveats, and without understanding that the "This doesn't work yet." warnings not only meant that the features weren't yet implemented, but also meant that they probably would never be.

    I've been seriously bitten by Microsoft three times, and I have never gained anything I consider valuable from using their products. (I have, on the other hand, gained a fair amount of value in using Linux and other "FOSS" stuff. Also gained a fair amount of value buying and using Mac stuff.)

    I think I should respect them the way I should respect, what was it someone said? a rabid cougar?

    1. Re:Money attracts ... by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1
      1987. Yeah, nothing's changed since then. As for the socialist "money attracts the greedy" idea, give me a break. Do you think the best football players in the world are the middle aged guys who go out and play for fun on Sunday? Are the best skateboarders in the world the 17 year olds down at the community ramps on weekends?

      The idea is ridiculous. I do like how you basically admitted you have no idea about what Microsoft is doing. At least that's telling - you base your meaningless opinions on hearsay and the groupthink phenomenon that runs rampant around here.

  176. Not Nitrogen, by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    Flourine.

    Just because there is a temporary excess of Flourine in the atmosphere right now doesn't mean that one should just breathe it.

  177. Re:I thought OS X Linux by dhavleak · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, I was aware of Apple's Xserve/SAN offerings when I wrote my post. I didn't mean to imply that Apple is absent in the Server segment, though I guess it's easy to infer that - so my bad.

    The context there started with Windows and Linux forming a duopoly and then someone pointed out that OS-X wasn't an OS with 'general availability', and got pounced on. I attempted to defend him saying that unlike Linux and Windows you can't buy a sundry 1u blade and run OS X Server on it (afaik - pls correct me if I'm wrong). i.e. Apple limit the 'general availability' of their OS in the server scenario as well, similar to the way they do in the desktop scenario. I guess AIX was a bad example...

    With due respect to John Siracusa's article, I don't think it was very informative. He went on repeatedly about the iPhone in the enterprise, which is far from relevant to Apple's presence there. He also claims that Apple is being high-minded and deliberately ignoring markets where it has to sell to someone other than the end user. Well, that would be any bulk contract. I don't think Apple sells the macs in schools and colleges to the kids there directly - they sell them to the universities and boards controlling the money. I don't understand this attempt to put an altruistic/high-minded/whatever spin to Apple's intentions - they're a company like any other.

    Then he repeats classic Jobs sound bytes such as:

    Want more? Here's Jobs's response to a question about Apple's neglect of the low-end of the market (e.g., $500 PCs, $100 phones, etc.):
    There's some stuff in our industry that we wouldn't be proud to ship. And we
    just can't do it. We can't ship junk. There are thresholds we can't cross
    because of who we are.
    This can all sound pretty smug. For a more grounded interpretation, you can try to look at it from a business perspective--profit margins, avoiding commoditization, the potential for growth and so on--but there's no getting around the results. And no matter how you slice it, the decision to ignore markets where you must sell to someone other than the end user is pretty high-minded (for a corporation). It's also perhaps the only way to ever create great products, products that customers actually love.

    Think about this the next time you're peeling stickers off your new laptop at work.

    This is where Apple and Jobs let themselves down. It comes off as smug and disrespectful towards companies and individuals who buy budget PCs. At my previous company we had about 1000+ corporate employees who's PC use consisted of productivity apps, and enterprise app front-ends, so a fairly common enterprise scenario. Bbudget PCs and laptops are exactly what they need. And they need to be easy to maintain, upgrade etc. If style/brand positioning is getting in the way of these criteria, taking pot-shots isn't the solution. They need to find the right compromises -- and they will do this if and when they are able to focus on this segment. Until then, the high-minded thing to do would be to refrain from snide remarks of this nature.

    I have no doubt that OS X is a credible server OS. That's not the point. There are many reasons it's not present more in the enterprise. One of them is that Apple doesn't focus on the different Enterprise verticals and sell complete solutions. It's more like, here's Xserver and OS X Server, and Web Objects, and oh btw: there's all this cool OSS stuff that you can run on it as well. Over generalization, I know, but the point remains.

    They seem to know it, and they don't want to get spread too thin, so they're picking battles they can win. Right now the consumer desktop is one such battle, so I think they're doing the right thing by nibbling away at the desktop market first, while keeping the enterprise thread alive until they're ready to make moves there as well. This is a much more credible explanation than Siracusa's -- contrast Apple's manpower to MS and IBM's, and add the "we delayed Leopard because we moved a lot of devs to the iPhone" and it gets even more weight.

  178. Re:I thought OS X Linux by dhavleak · · Score: 1

    I have no idea why that paragraph got boldfaced :P.. I guess I typed <b> instead of <p>?? Sorry.. didn't mean to yell :P

  179. This is a joke, right? by Igarden2 · · Score: 1

    This is a joke, right? Right????

    --
    Normally I ascribe all life to intelligent design, but in your case I'll make an exception.
  180. So? by Britz · · Score: 1

    Vista ist still crap!

  181. Re:Active Directory by amsr · · Score: 1

    Look I have nothing against AD. And in fact, if I were deploying a large network of PCs I'd probably use it too. I just with they would cut some of the legacy cruft out of it and make the admin tools better. I *know* its LDAP and Kerberos, however, they also maintain all the legacy NT domain stuff. Like why do they even bother with the SYSVOL stuff anymore, just store it all in LDAP and make it simpler. I guess my complaint about AD is the same complaint I have about windows in general. They keep legacy crap around too long that just ends up making things more complicated. Like do people really still need to have the ability to join Win98 computers to AD?

  182. Re:Active Directory by amsr · · Score: 1

    Just because their marketing has been out to lunch for 10 years doesn't mean they can't still have decent products. MS clearly knows how to muscle their way into organizations but that doesn't mean their products are better. Good marketing doesn't necessarily mean good products. Or the other way around.

  183. Re:I thought OS X Linux by shaitand · · Score: 1

    I believe you are confusing me with the great grandparent the other poster was responding to.

  184. Re:I thought OS X Linux by shaitand · · Score: 1

    The operating system is the lowest level software abstraction to the hardware. The lines have become blurred nowdays but generally speaking, that is the kernel. Contrary to what some (*cough* GNU) would have you believe the operating system is NOT the user environment and does not include a shell or utilities to interact with users.

    GNU provides tools that are very useful and help make any operating system they are run on a productive interface. There probably wouldn't be a Linux OS without them. That doesn't somehow make them part of the OS however.

  185. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    No prob about the yelling. I just figured you were a loud mouth. =)

    You make some really good points, both as to why Apple hasn't been successful in the enterprise and why that's probably part of their strategy. There is something to be said about knowing ones limitations. Manpower is probably part of it, but I wouldn't read too much into the delay of OS X 10.5 Leopard. It's not like Apple is the first company to let a deadline slip because they got overextended. coughcoughlonghorn. cough.

    Sircusa's article (to me, anyway) was more about Apple's corporate DNA, if there is such a thing. Jobs' comments might sound smug but I don't know if that's the case. No doubt he's being self serving, and absolutely no doubt he's insanely arrogant (I've met him, so I know first hand). But his comments aren't so much smug as they are talking past the fanboys and the antifanboys to the investors. He's proclaiming an Apple strength where some will try to argue its a weakness. And he's got to do it vociferously, because there are a lot of people outside of the tech world that are spreading all sorts of bad information with the intention of manipulating the market. This hasn't been that big an issue until recently, since Apple shares have been on such a tear. Don't believe me? Check out thestreet.com and Jim Cramer. The dude is a stock trader, and he makes bundles if he can push the price up or down on a given day. (He doesn't just do this with Apple, but Apple's been a big target for him the last six months.)

    Anyway, I've got to run. I don't think I explained myself as well as I could have. Bottom line is that you make some good points and I mostly agree with you.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  186. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Scotman · · Score: 1

    I bet he is being payed to say that. There is no need for the Linux community to change their rivalry. Microsoft IS good at things. But they are FAR from perfect. There is plenty to go at them about. It would to stupid for anyone else (that does not offer an OS to attack someone that does). So there is no one in the world that is better suited for it. We all love a good challenge. ;)

  187. He'll sober up by Monday by baomike · · Score: 1

    EOM

  188. Re:I thought OS X Linux by dhavleak · · Score: 1

    Agreed about the point of showing strength to investors. The move to stay out has to look deliberate and planned as opposed to "we can't go there yet 'cos we don't have the resources". So we agree to mostly agree.. I like it when that happens :)

  189. In whose opinion?

    If I'm going to just be watching, I prefer to go watch the rugby team of the school I teach at over watching professional sports. I, a middle-aged old man, prefer to participate, myself, help out the coaching staff, hold the tackling dummy while the kids practice hitting it low, let them "teach" me how to hit the tackle low so they can figure out what they are supposed to be doing, etc.

    I suppose there is some useful medical research being done in professional sports. And I suppose there is even the occasional exploring of a "new" technique (generally harvested from the amateur arena) and the rules that the new technique requires to keep the games "fair". It's not a total waste, but it sure seems like the pros have gone way over the top.

    (I suppose there may be some jealousy here -- I could start a good software company or two with just a tenth of what the biggest names bring down in a year.)

    But, in general, I prefer seeing (and sometimes joining with) a bunch of amateurs exploring and being creative, over watching a bunch of pros polishing their schtick while they face the inevitability of middle age.

    Yeah, I don't know what Microsoft is doing. I read the packages, it says "Feature A, B, ... ." I open the package and start reading the manual: Feature A only works if conditions P && Q && R, and a full moon on a Monday are met. I can't believe they would seriously mean that so I try to use feature A anyway. Turns out feature B conflicts with feature A. Can I turn off feature B? Only when !P || !Q || !R or it's not a full moon on a Monday. WtFrustrations?

    I don't need feature B anyway, I need feature A. But if I contact Microsoft, they tell me that everybody is using feature B. If I'm not, I'm not on the bandwagon. Feature A is not where it's at. I'm not going to make money there this year.

    You want to lecture me about groupthink?

  190. Are Linux promoters nuts by frankjg2 · · Score: 1

    Just reading a few of the comments on this thread would scare away any intelligent computer user. The comments here make a Linux supporter appear to have a vocabulary of 4 letter words or less. It sure makes Linux look bad.

  191. Re:I thought OS X Linux by byolinux · · Score: 1

    In terms of a typical Unix, you have a kernel, a shell, libraries and tools. GNU has all those, and some people choose to replace one of them with Linux.

    * Shell - bash
    * Libraries - glibc
    * Tools - GNU coreutils
    * Kernel - Hurd

    Bash, isn't productive? Install GNOME - it's part of GNU.

    http://www.gnome.org/about/

    "GNOME is Free Software and part of the GNU project."

  192. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Apache, at least, enjoys quite a bit of market share [netcraft.com], and Linux is probably still at at least 20-30%, if not 50% of web servers." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @12:16AM (#20208255)

    Apache? It's run by folks looking to spend as little as possible is why. Nothing's wrong with that though... but, that's the point.

    "It may still be a smaller target than desktop Windows" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @12:16AM (#20208255)

    It IS... Far, FAR smaller!

    "but the fact that it has had close to ZERO compromises in the wild, even with a decent amount of marketshare on the server, says something about its security." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @12:16AM (#20208255)

    'Close to zero', eh?

    Well, by way of comparison??

    Go to SANS, & find out what the compromises are on say, oh... SQLServer 2005 (thru its entire duration in this version no less) are.

    Hint/Clue: "0"/zero/nada/none/zip vulnerabilities in SQLServer 2005 in its entire history thusfar, no less, lol... l

    (Last time I looked @ least, & that was like a month ago or so)

    APK

    P.S.=> "Sorry, not by much. I imagine you've gotten about as many people to lock down their systems as I've gotten people to switch to Linux" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @12:16AM (#20208255)

    From the Windows world, put it this way:

    E.G. #1 -> I've gotten MORE than just a few emails from folks for HOSTS files & .reg files for security, & that I know of?

    E.G. #2 -> So far - Around 7,500 views on the very topic I post for Windows users in a URL, a "sticky permanent @ the top of section's page, thread" here in the URL below:

    I think those are decent numbers, & they grow, daily, which is GOOD: "if you can reach just 1 person..." geometric progression, really!

    (Information, for, How to in effect, get the 84.735/100 score on the multiplatform CIS Tool security test, that runs on Solaris, FreeBSD, Linux variants, & Win32), right here:

    APK "12 step program" to securing a modern Windows NT-based OS (2000/XP/Server 2003/VISTA):

    http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?s=611 9352099fca3907e8fc400352826c2&p=375355#post375355

    AND, via the results I achieve on it:

    http://img.techpowerup.org/070618/APK14SecurityPoi ntsCISToolResult84735.jpg

    It appears to be a test & challenge, that EVERY *NIX fiend here avoids taking no less, 30 times now... & we ALL know why!

    They simply & obviously cannot secure even their FreeBSD &/or SeLinux kernel addon hooks (for layered ACL analog security via MAC, Linux distros that have OR work with it), enough to exceed my score, much less equal it!

    (Who cares though - really! I just wish to see a screenshot of someone's results with it)!

    Even though each of their objections are overcome, such as yours feeling it is malware of somekind, yet SANS.ORG notes it as valid?

    "This is a truly moronic statement. If there were no "Hacker/Crackers" in the world, wouldn't there also be no need for security?" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @12:16AM (#20208255)

    Unfortunately, it is a harsh reality, & more than a few folks out there would agree, they DO DRIVE SECURITY IMPROVEMENTS! apk

  193. Our enemy is closed source software, not Microsoft by wikinerd · · Score: 1

    The strategy of the free software community is to create a world where free software is the norm. Destroying Microsoft is simply a battle, not the outcome of the war. Actually this battle is close to be concluded in GNU/Linux's favour. Unless Microsoft radically changes its culture or acquires a significant company, I do not expect them to be able to hold even a tenth of the PC market by 2020 or 2025. I believe the most important threat to GNU/Linux and free software nowadays is the government (specifically laws that discriminate or prohibit the use of free software in various applications), not a single corporation.

  194. Respect is earned, not given... by jddunlap · · Score: 1

    I will start respecting Microsoft when they discontinue their abusive monopolistic business practices and not before.

  195. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #3 by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Apache? It's run by folks looking to spend as little as possible is why.

    Everyone is looking to spend as little as possible. It's called "business".

    Go to SANS, & find out what the compromises are on say, oh... SQLServer 2005

    Found one! It's called SQL Slammer.

    Oh, you meant 2005? That's not a fair comparison -- you're asking about a specific version of a product. A new version, of course.

    Note: It's only 2007 -- SQL Server 2005 has only been out two years. SQL Server 2000 was the version targeted by SQL Slammer, as far as I can tell, and that was out three years before it was found.

    Now, I did not say Gentoo Linux 2007.0, or Ubuntu Feisty. I said, ANY Linux.

    As I said, Microsoft has gotten better at security -- however, I'm not sure they're quite there yet. Linux, however, has a solid track record of more than a decade. Total number of virus/worm outbreaks, I can count on one hand.

    Unfortunately, it is a harsh reality, & more than a few folks out there would agree, they DO DRIVE SECURITY IMPROVEMENTS!

    That they do, again, in the sense that terrorism drives physical security improvements.

    Your wording was that they are "doing the world a favor". Would you also say that terrorism does the world a favor?

    Maybe our security is better, and maybe reality is harsh, but I would not say that this is a good thing. After all, I'm not sure we could ever have world peace, or a complete end to crime -- but I would never say that crime is a good thing, or that a serial rapist is doing the world a favor. Would you?

    I'm not sure we actually disagree here, I'm just trying to get you to be a little more careful what you say. It wouldn't kill you to proofread a little before you run your mouth.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  196. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Oh, you meant 2005? That's not a fair comparison -- you're asking about a specific version of a product. A new version, of course." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @02:47AM (#20209057)

    YOU'RE WRONG, as usual...

    "As I said, Microsoft has gotten better at security -- however, I'm not sure they're quite there yet."b> - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @02:47AM (#20209057)

    I am, & so much moreso now: MAINLY because YOU refuse to take a multiplatform test of security done by THE CENTER FOR INTERNET SECURITY, CIS TOOL, NOTED BY SANS + COMPUTERWORLD AS LEGIT (though you thought it could be malware, lol, guess again), & beat my score on it using Windows Server 2003 SP #2, & achieving an 84.735/100 score on this test...

    I am certain you cannot beat it (mainly because you admit you do not want to tune your system security further in layered security using SeLinux (which has SOCKETS LEVEL CONTROL and FILESYSTEM RIGHTS CONTROL, the 2 things you complain about - you set SeLinux MAC into motion on those areas, ontop of IPTables (sockets) & chroot/chmod/chown (filesystem/acl rights) & you MIGHT be able to do better on this test!).

    You're using ANY TRICK YOU CAN, & THEY ARE NOTHING BUT COP OUTS, everytime.

    "Linux, however, has a solid track record of more than a decade. Total number of virus/worm outbreaks, I can count on one hand."b> - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @02:47AM (#20209057)

    Along with the total number of users it has as well, maybe? OR, is that market share %-age?? You'd be about RIGHT on the latter mind you (for once)...

    APK

    P.S.=> Give up already - you can try to change the subject ALL YOU LIKE, but the bottom line is you KNOW your system is not fully potentially secured (SeLinux, first you did not have it on UBUNTU (and, you do by default), & THEN YOU SUDDENLY DO!) & then you said you thought CIS TOOL (a valid multiplatform test of security that runs on various *NIX variants AND Win32) was malware (Funny - SANS + COMPUTERWORLD SAY ITS NOT! I wonder who the more credible source is, they, OR You?)... apk

  197. Re:I thought OS X Linux by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    this is an open forum where people are entitled to think OSX, Linux, or Windows sucks
    You're kidding, right?
    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  198. Re:I thought OS X Linux by Xabraxas · · Score: 1

    Mac OS-X, (like all the Unixes), is closer to being a "real" OS than Linux or Windows

    First I would love to see an explanation for that statement. Second OSX technically isn't a Unix although it is Unix-like. In fact Linux is much more similar to a "real" Unix than the Mach/BSD hybrid that is OSX.

    --
    Time makes more converts than reason
  199. No duopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A duopoly doesn't and will not exist. When the fuck will "the Linux community" (which is mostly an abstract idea, rather than real people who get things done) wake up? A bunch of idealistic but lazy ninnies who like to read about Linux online and pretend they're part of an effort. Bah. Bottom line - MS employees are paid, thus their product is better, and they advertise, and they support games off the shelf of EB on release day. Linux is not going to touch MS market share. WAKE UP.

  200. Re:I thought OS X Linux by shaitand · · Score: 1

    '* Shell - bash
    * Libraries - glibc
    * Tools - GNU coreutils
    * Kernel - Hurd

    All very useful indeed but Hurd is the only one in the list that is an operating system. The rest are tools that could be combined with a number of operating systems to make a productive system.

    Enough of this nonsense. The 'GNU/Linux' people lost this debate years ago and for good reason. Any University OS Design course will teach you how to write an OPERATING SYSTEM KERNEL and no amount of support for the good work of the GNU project can change that definition.

  201. Re:I thought OS X Linux by shaitand · · Score: 1

    I see people get modded down for making anti-ms and pro-linux comments more than anything. People always make comments like yours and I do believe that the actual readership is mostly pro-linux and pro-open but there are paid Slashdroids these days.

  202. Take it easy guys. by Jim+Zemlin · · Score: 1

    I'm not sitting around listening to drm music on a Zune and playing XBox games while using the latest version of Office on Vista. Geez.

    Let me sum it up:

    "To know your Enemy, you must become your Enemy. Know your enemy and know yourself, find naught in fear for 100 battles. Know yourself but not your enemy, find level of loss and victory. Know thy enemy but not yourself, wallow in defeat every time."

    - Sun Tzu

    I think it's clear that you must understand your enemy to effectively compete against them. My position on Microsoft has been clear for years. Here is one recent example:

    http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/may 2007/tc20070525_325967.htm

    I know that we could spend the next 100 posts here talking about how much Microsoft sucks, but I suggest alternatively that we spend time talking about how we can leverage our strengths to beat them.

    Jim

  203. Re:I thought OS X Linux by byolinux · · Score: 1

    Operating System Kernel is part of an Operating System :)

    Like a Car Engine is part of a car.

    GNU/Linux is an important name as it draws attention to the goal of creating an operating system where users can do every job in free software.

  204. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #3 by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    YOU'RE WRONG, as usual...

    How am I wrong here? Was I hallucinating when you tried to compare a specific version of a specific product to the entire ecosystem of Linux distributions all the way back to kernel 0.0.1?

    Along with the total number of users it has as well, maybe?

    That is a troll, plain and simple.

    I actually cannot find more than five virus outbreaks for Linux. You're welcome to try, if you think there have been more.

    However, I personally know more than five Linux users, and even in an entirely self-selected counter, there are over a hundred thousand users.

    I realize that's a small number, but please remember two things -- that is a self-selected counter, and you just said (more lies and spin) that there are less than five Linux users.

    you can try to change the subject ALL YOU LIKE

    I am talking about real measurable security. You're the one bringing it back to this one test.

    It looks like you're evading this subject desperately here, because the numbers simply don't support your theory that Windows is even close to as secure as Linux. You've lost this one, be gracious and admit defeat.

    (This is different than me "evading" the test -- you haven't given me one reason to doubt the numbers I've cited here, while I've given you many reasons to doubt your test. You may reject that I think it may be malware, but at least I am willing to talk about it. You, obviously, are not.)

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  205. Re:I thought OS X Linux by shaitand · · Score: 1

    'Operating System Kernel is part of an Operating System'

    An operating system kernel IS an operating system. The GNU side lost the GNU/Linux debate long ago, lets not bring it back.

  206. Re:I thought OS X Linux by byolinux · · Score: 1

    It's not an operating system. Think about what you're saying.

    If you have a hard disk, format it to ext3 and then put a kernel onto it, what can you do?

    You can't boot, there's no shell, you have no libraries, no software, no commands.

    Now if you had all those - a GNU shell, GNU libraries, GNU chess, GNU coreutils and the GNU kernel - what would you have? You'd have GNU. You'd be able to login, and play GNU chess.

    Now say I replace one part of the GNU system, with something written by a third party. Say, the kernel... What do I have now?

    GNU shell, GNU libraries, GNU chess, GNU coreutils and a third-party kernel, Linux. It wouldn't be fair to refer to this new system as GNU, so by referring to it as GNU/Linux, we do several things.

    * Give credit to the Linux team for producing a working kernel much faster than GNU.

    * State that the system is a mixture of GNU and Linux, which leaves the door open for alternative versions, including GNU/OpenSolaris, GNU/kFreeBSD and GNU/NetBSD as well as GNU itself.

    * Make users of the system aware of the goals of the GNU project, which are to create an operating system that is completely free software and includes tools to do every job that somebody might want, in free software. As opposed to the goal of Linux, which is to create a portable kernel.

    * As a by product of the GNU Project - more people will learn about, and write free software.

  207. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "How am I wrong here?" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @04:12PM (#20216121)

    Simple:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=264303&thresho ld=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&cid=20219969

    Too easy... & PLENTY of times there...

    APK

  208. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "How am I wrong here?" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @04:12PM (#20216121)

    Quit trying to change the subject, first of all, & THIS is how:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=264303&thresho ld=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&cid=20219969

    & PLENTY OF TIMES (and all you do, lol, is evade answering the questions there, about what YOU stated no less, constantly): TOO EASY!

    (NO matter how much you try to change the subject? You had each of your objections overcome, & made a ton of mistakes on the way evidenced in that URL above!)

    "I am talking about real measurable security. You're the one bringing it back to this one test." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Monday August 13, @04:12PM (#20216121)

    AND, Who brought what up FIRST? I did, & you are avoiding it, & changing the subject in order to TRY to do so here, constantly!

    I was merely asking any *NIX people to take this test, CIS TOOL, a VALID multiplatform test of security... & by the way?

    A test IS A MEASURE! It tests things you should have secured to be safe(r). Why do benchmarks of ANY kind exist? To test things.

    Oh, I absolutely STRONGLY suspect, this is WHY any & all *NIX people I challenged to CIS TOOL, avoid posting their scores on it:

    That once the test is loaded & runs on their systems, that an 84.735/100 score I can obtain on it using Windows Server 2003 SP #2 on it is not one *NIX folks can reach or exceed apparently, & they RUN... completely omitting posting a valid unfaked photo of their scores on it!

    Hey - Just like you! They all ran, 30 times now in fact, with b.s. excuses I have had to overcome each time OR to point out falsehoods they spouted (again, just like you).

    APK

    P.S.=> Why don't you face up to those questions there in that first URL I posted above?

    I.E.-> You know now that your MAIN 'objection' is nullified by valid reputable sources (& that was that you felt this CIS TOOL might be malware & SANS + COMPUTERWORLD show QUITE otherwise)...

    ABOVE ALL ELSE: It's "just a test" as you seem to be saying, so why RUN FROM IT? WHY NOT POST A VALID SCORE IMAGE (not a faked one like you stated you COULD put up)??

    LOL... I know why:

    "(Insert *NIX variant here) is more secure or securable than WINDOWS" type b.s. here I often see @ /.?

    PROVE IT! Take the multiplatform CIS TOOL test & put your score on it up here & show me that statement I often see here on this website is true, on this test!

    (Meet, OR exceed, my score on it of 84.735/100 with my using Windows Server 2003 SP #2 fully hotfix patched & custom hardened for security, *NIX fiends... "Put your monies where your mouths are, put up, OR shut up!")... apk

  209. Please be a bit more specific. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    First off, the link is broknen.

    Second, when I fix it, it takes me to a page that says absolutely nothing about SQL server. I don't feel like reading that entire comment again (considering I've already replied to it), and I don't remember seeing anything in there proving me wrong about my comparisons.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:Please be a bit more specific. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=264303&thresho ld=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&cid=20219969

      Here's a list of many companies & their results/case studies, using SQLServer 2005 for line-of-business/enterprise class/mission critical objectives & tasks...

      http://www.microsoft.com/sql/bigdata/default.mspx

      (companies like NASDAQ using Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 to keep the official record of trades & dissemination of that info. & @ a stable rate of the "fabled 5-9's" of uptime (99.999%) & no history of them being cracked/hacked either...)

      SQLServer 2005 vulnerability history @ SECUNIA:

      http://secunia.com/product/6782/?task=statistics

      (Zero/0 advisories of vulnerabilities...)

      APK

      P.S.=> That's most of your objections overcome & how/why, & this now too:

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=264303&cid=202 59631

      apk

  210. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #4 by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Hey - Just like you! They all ran, 30 times now in fact, with b.s. excuses I have had to overcome each time OR to point out falsehoods they spouted (again, just like you).

    Isn't it just a bit arrogant to say that 30 people are wrong and you're right? That every single time, it was really them "avoiding the test" and not you asking something unreasonable?

    You know now that your MAIN 'objection' is nullified by valid reputable sources

    Nope. You don't understand the concept of trust in security, as I've pointed out before.

    Furthermore, your sans and computerworld articles are not endorsements. If you'd like, I can email sans and computerworld, and I am sure I would get some sort of response of "Well, it looks pretty useful, but no, we can't endorse this. Use at your own risk."

    It's "just a test" as you seem to be saying, so why RUN FROM IT?

    For the same reason you ran from my test.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  211. "Changing the subject?" by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    On multiple occasions, you've done cross-posting.

    That is, you literally copy and paste one post from one thread into another, where it's completely irrelevant. Or, you rehash an old argument, or bring up something completely inane.

    At least I gave segues. You can't deal with the reality of statistics, which don't back up your premise that "Windows is or can be made to be more secure than Linux." So, rather than talk about that? You say "You changed the subject! Waah!" and abruptly copy and paste the same argument you've brought up here a thousand times, which is, if I don't take your test, I must have taken it already and gotten a bad score.

    Think about it -- you're doing a self-selected survey of security-conscious people -- the very people who are likely to understand the concept of "trust", and more importantly, why you shouldn't just run some random executable from the Internet, no matter how tightly you can lock said executable down.

    Oh, and it is spyware, at the very least -- it collects statistics and sends them back to a central server. I believe SANS is the one that said this.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:"Changing the subject?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You can't deal with the reality of statistics, which don't back up your premise that "Windows is or can be made to be more secure than Linux." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @04:37AM (#20246615)

      Well, I have actually taken STAT 1 & 2, for one thing, while in college... have you?

      Stats do have one weakness: Sample sets used, no doubt about it!

      I know 1 statistic that might disturb you though - Windows dominance in the world of PC's, from single user home rigs, to home LANs, up thru departmental servers, right up into the datacenter for mission critical servers (e.g. here? NASDAQ recording its OFFICIAL RECORD OF TRADES & for information dissemination of them, using Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 (which has NO VULNERABILITIES IN IT, in this version, thru its entire history)...

      Want stats though? OK, a super-current one (Lol!):

      UBUNTU SERVERS HACKED/CRACKED (08/15/2007):

      http://it.slashdot.org/it/07/08/15/1341224.shtml

      & this:

      National Cyber Alert System: Cyber Security Bulletin 2005 year end/2006 start Summary:

      http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/bulletins/SB2005.html

      A quote from it:

      "There were 5198 reported vulnerabilities: 812 Windows operating system vulnerabilities; 2328 Unix/Linux operating vulnerabilities; and 2058 Multiple operating system vulnerabilities."

      3 times as many for *NIX/Linux variants & the software that rides on them, vs. Windows...

      APK

      P.S.=> What do you think of THOSE stats...? apk

    2. Re:"Changing the subject?" by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      I know 1 statistic that might disturb you though - Windows dominance in the world of PC's, from single user home rigs, to home LANs, up thru departmental servers, right up into the datacenter for mission critical servers

      Sorry, dominance in the datacenter is a very recent thing, and actually not a very solid one. They have maybe 50% marketshare, last I looked, up from 25%.

      "Having some big important name depend on us" is not the same thing as "dominating." It's an ancedote, and I've got a few for you -- Dreamworks and ILM have moved to Linux renderfarms, even many of them to Linux workstations. Lord of the Rings was rendered on Linux, and the Halo movie is likely to be as well.

      But dominance has nothing to do with security -- in fact, dominance lessens your effective security on Windows, because it gains none of the security benefits of a popular open project, and all of the detriment of being such a huge target.

      To me, effective security is more important than theoretical security. Linux is a reasonably secure platform. I cannot say whether it's fundamentally more or less secure than NT. However, it's close enough that being a smaller target makes it more secure. I believe it would continue to be more secure even if it were a larger target, because it would also get a larger team of developers for free, and because I believe open projects have much more motivation to be secure than closed ones.

      Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 (which has NO VULNERABILITIES IN IT, in this version, thru its entire history)

      Yeah, and while we're at it, I've just written a piece of software which has no vulnerabilities in it.

      What's my secret?

      I just wrote it, duh.

      SQL Server 2005 is, if I'm not mistaken, the most recent SQL Server product. If you really want a fair comparison, look at the longer history -- SQL Server 2003 or so, I think, was hit by SQL Slammer. I don't know of any worms named after MySQL or PostgreSQL -- ANY version of them.

      So yes, if you're going to deliberately skew your sample sets in order to prove your point, you're right -- statistics get us nowhere. I'm not trying to skew anything, I'm trying the best I can to find fair comparisons that don't require me to do a lot of independent number crunching on my own.

      Want stats though? OK, a super-current one (Lol!):

      That's not a stat, it's just another ancedote.

      Keep in mind, these are not the servers actually owned by Ubuntu, these are donated ones.

      But I've got an ancedote of my own: I distinctly remember at least one instance in which the Windows Update servers were not only cracked, but were used to distribute malware as an automatic update. So this buys you nothing.

      "There were 5198 reported vulnerabilities: 812 Windows operating system vulnerabilities; 2328 Unix/Linux operating vulnerabilities; and 2058 Multiple operating system vulnerabilities."

      I really hate it when you copy and paste an argument I've already responded to, especially when you don't have anything new to say. Apparently, you either agree with my response (and are embarrassed enough to want to hide it), or you have been skimming my posts again.

      Simply put, that is not an apples to apples comparison, and is, in fact, about as far as you can get from an apples to apples comparison.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    3. Re:"Changing the subject?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ----
      "To me, effective security is more important than theoretical security. Linux is a reasonably secure platform. I cannot say whether it's fundamentally more or less secure than NT" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @11:03PM (#20256907)
      ----

      Well, you've got an EASY way to find out: Run CIS TOOL, since it is a multiplatform test for both Windows NT-based OS & *NIX variants (many, not all run it, odd... same codebase trees in say, FreeBSD which runs it, but OpenBSD does not (this kills *NIX imo))... the test IS noted by COMPUTERWORLD for its purpose (to help secure you) & SANS (a respected site for computer security).

      Put your money where your mouth is, put up or (you know what)... don't just "talk the talk", but "WALK THE WALK" & prove your statement in a FAIR test, based on best security practices analysis for the OS platform's its run on (testing analogs between them, WHICH THERE ARE PLENTY OF between *NIX & NT-based OS).

      ----
      "Sorry, dominance in the datacenter is a very recent thing, and actually not a very solid one. They have maybe 50% marketshare, last I looked, up from 25%." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @11:03PM (#20256907)
      ----

      Neither is "security by obscurity"... as far as a solid evidence of security.

      I.E.-> Just because something is less targetted does NOT mean it does NOT CONTAIN BUGS/HOLES/VULNERABILITIES, by any means/stretch-of-the-imagination!

      (Because a ware is less used, does NOT mean it is secure - & 'real hacker/cracker' types out there are looking to get information, to sell, for profit, are going to target THE MOST USED STUFF to increase the attack surface of their worms/virus/keylogger spywares etc., period! Good side of it? They DEFINITELY force MS & other software publishing house OEM's to "shore up their wares" & imo, are the best "security researchers" in the world really - well, those that disclose what they find, that is!).

      AND, hell of an increase for MS, wouldn't you say... I certainly would, I can assure you of that much.

      ----
      "Having some big important name depend on us" is not the same thing as "dominating." It's an ancedote, and I've got a few for you -- Dreamworks and ILM have moved to Linux renderfarms, even many of them to Linux workstations. Lord of the Rings was rendered on Linux, and the Halo movie is likely to be as well." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @11:03PM (#20256907)
      ----

      Ok, sure, you have a few BUT, I can "overwhelm & devastate" by producing MANY more, & from a single source!

      (... here is a TON of that type of data, from Microsoft's own case studies where SQLServer 2005 + Windows are in place, in large businesses (in high tpm mission-critical environs no less)):

      http://www.microsoft.com/sql/bigdata/default.mspx

      Dig around there, & you see TONS of folks with high tpm (transaction per minute) systems in place, like NASDAQ has using the Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 combination for the official record of trades & dissemination of that data...

      NASDAQ's system that uses Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 runs @ the "fabled 5-9's" of uptime no less (99.999%), 110% 'bulletproof & bugfree' of vulnerabilities in SQLServer 2005 (none in its nearly 4 yr. history now have surfaced) & NASDAQ has never had that system be "hacked/cracked" either...

      ----
      "However, it's close enough that being a smaller target makes it more secure. I believe it would continue to be more secure even if it were a larger target" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @11:03PM (#20256907)
      ----

      Neither is "security by obscurity"... as far as a solid evidence of security. See my previous statements about this, above, again.

      "because it would also get a larger team of developers for free, and because I believe open projects have much m

  212. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Isn't it just a bit arrogant to say that 30 people are wrong and you're right? That every single time, it was really them "avoiding the test" and not you asking something unreasonable?" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @04:32AM (#20246585)

    Not NEARLY as ARROGANT, as this (which I see a LOT here, especially on /.):

    "(Insert *NIX variant here) is more secure OR securable, than Windows!"

    Well, PROVE IT, is all I can say... & the best way to do that, that I know of?

    Well, via a comprehensive & noted by SANS & COMPUTERWORLD (as to its purpose, which is NOT 'malware/spyware' etc. as you said, LOL, (far from it - it'd have to be the dumbest malware of ALL TIME, since it tells you how to secure yourself)) multiplatform valid test of security: CIS TOOL!

    Put your monies, where your mouths are - put up a better score than mine on Windows Server 2003 SP #2 fully current hotfix patched (as of 2 days ago, Patch Tuesday from MS), OR, shut up... simple.

    ----

    "Nope. You don't understand the concept of trust in security, as I've pointed out before." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @04:32AM (#20246585)

    How's that? EVEN IF it could send out data, without my consent? It'd have to blow past layered security of IPSec policies, software firewall (ZA)... & worst comes to worst (not that I mind it contributing to a database of security scores + techniques mind you)?

    If I WERE worried about that? I'd either disable my network connection, or unplug my router... no NET access, period...

    Thus, I'd run it, get my score, uninstall it!

    (& that is EXACTLY what you can do, too, to overcome THAT objection on your part, OR use chown/chmod with SeLinux MAC on your filesystem + SeLinux SOCKETS LEVEL ACCESS CONTROL, via MAC & limit it to various users/programs etc. et al).

    ----

    "Furthermore, your sans and computerworld articles are not endorsements. If you'd like, I can email sans and computerworld, and I am sure I would get some sort of response of "Well, it looks pretty useful, but no, we can't endorse this. Use at your own risk."" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Thursday August 16, @04:32AM (#20246585)

    Yes, & that is PRETTY MUCH what you stated about it as well, per your quote, in another thread in our discussion here... but, how many wares have "disclaimers" in them like that, OR their documentation? MOST today, DO!

    ----

    You have ways around anything though you objected to (your main ones being it might be 'malware', lol, & it'd be the DUMBEST malware/spyware of ALL TIME, since it helps you, help yourself & your OS security + SANS & COMPUTERWORLD sure as hell didn't say it was malware, lol)

    PLUS others, that I note above (SeLinux + chmod/chown @ a filesystem/userrights of access level via MAC, & SeLinux SOCKETS LEVEL CONTROL + IpTables), that should make overcoming your remaining objections, simple enough, & they have (the things needed are NOT hard to do, & DO implement layered security).

    You have ways around the crc32/checksum validation of it as well, per something you can do with a pal, OR for tracing its files on disk (tools for this from SysInternals help here, RegMon, FileMon, DiskMon, Process Monitor & are FREE + very VERY good)...

    APK

    P.S.=> "For the same reason you ran from my test." -

    Uhm, first of all: WHAT TEST? & SECONDLY?? Aren't we discussing the multiplatform & very comprehensive CIS TOOL test of security, noted by SANS + COMPUTERWORLD for its purposes here? Heck - the gov't. is using this tool & IT IS WHY IT WAS DEVELOPED, to secure THEIR rigs better, down to the client-node levels... & it's based on "best practices" for the platform the various ports of it (Solaris, FreeBSD, Linux variants, & Windows NT-based OS) to HELP secure them (does your test do that I wonder, & on as MANY GROUNDS (ACL filesytems on state keeping/config files, files & folders rights, program rights, & more)? apk

  213. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #5 by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Well, PROVE IT, is all I can say...

    Yet you didn't even want to look at statistics until you found some ancedotes you thought might count as statistics. So much for your statistics classes.

    Let me put it this way: When you want to optimize a program for speed, do you immediately jump to things like unrolling loops, or hell, maybe -Os, whatever you feel is the best way to squeeze more speed out of it? Do you do these things, and just assume your computer is faster?

    Or do you actually go benchmark it? No, not with some tool that estimates how fast it should theoretically run -- what your CIS tool appears to do -- but an actual profiler, which measures and gives you a statistical analysis of where your program is spending the most time?

    How's that? EVEN IF it could send out data, without my consent? It'd have to blow past layered security of IPSec policies, software firewall (ZA)...

    I just suggested it was malware, and now you're saying it's not because it won't affect you.

    Yeah, SQL Slammer won't hit my Postgres server, but that sure as hell doesn't mean Slammer is a nice, friendly, trustworthy piece of software I should attempt to run!

    worst comes to worst (not that I mind it contributing to a database of security scores + techniques mind you)?

    I might not mind either. I mind that they didn't ask.

    It says something about their character and professionalism that means I'm much less likely to trust any result from their program, or to want to do anything else with their program other than throw it away.

    Ask yourself this: How likely would you be to hire the author of BonziBuddy or Gator to help you write some antivirus or antispyware?

    If I WERE worried about that? I'd either disable my network connection, or unplug my router... no NET access, period...

    Yes, I intend to. Or at least a softer version of that -- I'll run it in a VPN with net access disabled, maybe even a serial console only.

    Yes, & that is PRETTY MUCH what you stated about it as well, per your quote, in another thread in our discussion here... but, how many wares have "disclaimers" in them like that, OR their documentation? MOST today, DO!

    In that case, if you're being honest, you should put a similar disclaimer in your own quotes.

    And by the way, the tone of it was, again, one of "fair and unbiased reporting", which means that even if they thought it was the worst software imaginable, they could have given a pretty much identical report.

    SANS & COMPUTERWORLD sure as hell didn't say it was malware

    Then please counter me where I say they did, with a quote, instead of bringing it up without context here, with no better defense than "lol".

    Is "lol" your only defense? Pathetic.

    (the things needed are NOT hard to do, & DO implement layered security).

    Oh? You mean you've done them?

    In that case, you don't need me, you can just run it on the Linux box you've built and secured!

    for tracing its files on disk (tools for this from SysInternals help here, RegMon, FileMon, DiskMon, Process Monitor & are FREE + very VERY good)...

    And none for Linux.

    There are ways I can watch it, things like strace. However, that still doesn't tell me what I want to know -- whether a particular write was a good write, and well intended, or a bad write. The best I can do is run them under SELinux, or virtual machines (what I intend to do), such that there's no way I can think of that anything else can affect the test, or that the test can affect anything else.

    I realize it looks like I'm changing my position. I'm not. My position is not necessarily that I'm worried about the software damaging my systems -- from the beginning, anyone kno

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  214. Re:"STAT2", lol... round #5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Slammer is a nice, friendly, trustworthy piece of software I should attempt to run!" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @03:02AM (#20258183)

    Your logic's faulty, right there - that's a worm/virus/malware/trojan!

    CIS Tool is not. BOTH COMPUTERWORLD & SANS noted it as a tool to HELP YOU, help secure yourself (which, it does).

    After all: I am certain that when/if SQLSlammer is mentioned @ SANS or COMPUTERWORLD? It's not noted as a tool to help you secure yourself, but CIS TOOL was.

    "Let me put it this way: When you want to optimize a program for speed, do you immediately jump to things like unrolling loops, or hell, maybe -Os, whatever you feel is the best way to squeeze more speed out of it? Do you do these things, and just assume your computer is faster?" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @03:02AM (#20258183)

    I let the compiler do various optimizations, FIRST (once I have the init. design with debug traps in it, built (they get removed later, with profiling routines I initially use too))...

    Then, I do my OWN brand of profiling (been doing it this way ever since I could register in a hi-res multimedia timer really - I don't NEED 3rd party ones, as this does the job for me):

    Using those hi-res multimedia timers, I then count the ticks each routine of mine take & put it out to a file on disk OR, use a listbox recording it in memory (faster, less slow diskbound IO).

    The "worst routines" I then go after (those that take the MOST time to execute) to speed them up!

    Thus - @ that point, I examine my engine/algorithm & if I can't figure out a MORE EFFICIENT ONE? I step down first, to API call usage!

    (E.G.=> CopyFile in Win32 API's is a BIT faster than say, VB's CopyFile function call, because this one actually eventually resolves OUT to the Win32 API one, anyhow, which in turn, resolves down to the Nt/ZwAPI "native NT" api in the end, probably the FASTEST OF THE LOT, but the Win32 API ones are massively optimized, & nearly as fast as native NT API ones are (these you CAN call from Ring3 code too, mind you, native NT API calls, but there MIGHT be a 'context switch' overhead going from Win32 API usermode/Ring3/RPL3 calls, down to kernelmode/Ring0/RPL0 native API calls)...

    & then, lastly, I use "inline assembler" (VB doesn't give you this, but C/C++ & Delphi compilers do).

    "is lol your only defense? Pathetic." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @03:02AM (#20258183)

    Well, as to 'pathetic'? Your technical knowledge on how OS work in terms of I/O & how it is managed, is ASTONISHINGLY LACKING, evidenced here by this exchange we had:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=264303&cid=202 59631

    I was literally astounded you do NOT know that material in fact... it's basic stuff imo! How can you code around any OS, if you don't understand those fundamentals?

    I have to ask - did you receive any formal training in MIS or Comp. Sci., like a degree from an accredited school?? I would say not, & it would explain your showing there.

    "Yet you didn't even want to look at statistics until you found some ancedotes you thought might count as statistics" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @03:02AM (#20258183)

    The stats I cite are valid... they are the summation of ALL vulnerabilities present in *NIX's & their apps VS. those in Windows & its apps... in fact, when that statistic compilation was assembled in 2006? LOL, the "penguin crew" around here raised "total hell" over it, lol...

    "So much for your statistics classes." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @03:02AM (#20258183)

    Again: How is the data I listed invalid? And, I did actually take STAT 1 & 2 in academia, & did well @ them (A's both times)... & statistics DEFINITELY have 1 weakness - in the samp

  215. Doesn't prove me wrong... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Yet again, I reject that comparing the very most recent version is sufficient statistical evidence. As I understand it, SQL Server 2005 is two years old, and SQL Server 2000 was three years old when it was hit with the SQL Slammer worm.

    So, come back in five or ten years, and we can compare SQL Server 2005 -- maybe it'll be hit with a massive worm next year. Otherwise, either compare broader sets of versions, or older ones.

    In any case, I would like to point out that I think statistics are tricky to do right, and neither of us has provided a completely undisputable statistical comparison. Except maybe mine, pointing out that for most of its history, Linux has not been attacked, while Windows has, badly.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:Doesn't prove me wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " Except maybe mine, pointing out that for most of its history, Linux has not been attacked, while Windows has, badly." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @06:43PM (#20268857)

      If you say so, but, take a peek @ this (very current data - remember what I said about that earlier in my last post? Here goes):

      July 2007 - Operating System Vulnerability Scorecard

      http://blogs.technet.com/security/archive/2007/08/ 16/july-2007-operating-system-vulnerability-scorec ard.aspx

      AND THESE, by category...

      WORKSTATION CLASS OS VULNERABILITIES:

      http://blogs.technet.com/blogfiles/security/Window sLiveWriter/July2007OperatingSystemVulnerabilitySc or_DB33/image_5.png

      SERVER CLASS OS VULNERABILITIES:

      http://blogs.technet.com/blogfiles/security/Window sLiveWriter/July2007OperatingSystemVulnerabilitySc or_DB33/image_7.png

      "Read 'em, & WEEP..."

      APK

      P.S.=> Windows Server 2003, & XP seem to do a LOT better, showing less vulnerabilities overall, & less to patch + done earlier it seemed (upon initial scanning @ least), by a FAR MARGIN over LINUX... apk

  216. Please quote me correctly. This is insulting. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    "Slammer is a nice, friendly, trustworthy piece of software I should attempt to run!" - by SanityInAnarchy

    Sorry, no. The full quote was: "sure as hell doesn't mean Slammer is a nice, friendly, trustworthy piece of software I should attempt to run!"

    The point is: Even if I set up my system so that it cannot possibly hurt me, running malware is still kind of pointless, which is probably why you've refused to take my test. It's also still not a good idea, which is why we don't all set up virtual machines on which to run WeatherBug, just so it can get us the weather or whatever it does.

    You spent a good deal of time talking about mechanisms I could use to run this tool without putting my system at risk. You even attempted to claim that because I didn't bring them up in the first place, I must not have known about them.

    Sorry, not happening until you convince me that not only is it not malware, but that it's something I'd gain some benefit from. You've presented pretty much your entire argument for that, and it's not enough, which means I'll only run it if I have too much time on my hands and really want to setup a VM for it. I was actually planning to do that this weekend, but my brother's got a LAN party happening, and you've attacked me yet again with baseless insults, including this misquote.

    If this doesn't improve, I'm not even going to keep replying. For awhile, we had an interesting, almost civil conversation about filesystem design, and you even posted a comment (though unsigned) in which you stated your arguments in a simple, well-worded way, without stooping to personal attacks. But now you're back to your old tricks.

    CIS Tool is not.

    I only have the word of people I don't "trust" for that.

    You keep trying to suggest that even if it's really all that bad, I can lock it down and run it in a sandbox. I'm just pointing out that simply because I can secure a system against malware does not mean I should go out of my way to run some.

    Using those hi-res multimedia timers, I then count the ticks each routine of mine take & put it out to a file on disk OR, use a listbox recording it in memory (faster, less slow diskbound IO)....
    The "worst routines" I then go after (those that take the MOST time to execute) to speed them up!

    Which is my point exactly. You don't actually know which one is slower, except by actually taking measurements. Statistics.

    Your technical knowledge on how OS work in terms of I/O & how it is managed, is ASTONISHINGLY LACKING, evidenced here by this exchange we had:

    Then reply to me there. You're the one lacking.

    I lack certain specific knowledge about Windows, but I am not the one who thinks it's a good idea to put a pagefile in RAM!

    That's as logical as trying to create a perpetual motion machine! Which is to say, it isn't.

    Now, stop changing the subject. You were specifically avoiding a question by simply saying "lol, you're wrong" or something to that effect. And rather than address it, you'd now like to bring in another discussion.

    The stats I cite are valid... they are the summation of ALL vulnerabilities present in *NIX's & their apps VS. those in Windows & its apps...

    No, they are not.

    If they were, don't you think you'd see FAR more vulnerabilities in Windows, given how many more apps exist for it?

    Again: How is the data I listed invalid?

    You mention more than a few ancedotes as "statistics", including the recent compromise of the Ubuntu servers.

    I do CIS TOOL posts for 1 reason here:
    That for all the:
    "(Insert *NIX variant here) is more secure or securable than Windows"

    And yet, you were willing to carry on a conversation for this long, trying to convince me to run the test for mysel

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  217. It is, too bad you are bringing it on yourself! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The point is: Even if I set up my system so that it cannot possibly hurt me" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @09:45PM (#20271119)

    You can, & YOU KNOW IT:

    You think it phones home with some info. that should NOT go out? DISCONNECT your cablemodem/dslmodem (whatever you use)... that's even simpler than disabling the network connection in Windows @ least, &/or using IPTables + SeLinux SOCKETS LEVEL MAC CONTROL!

    You think "world writable/Everyone group access" to files it writes is bad?? Chmod/chown them, & use SeLinux MAC ACL like control on them also..

    You think it's 'malware', comparing it to SLAMMER?

    Well, SANS & COMPUTERWORLD (sites often cited here on /. no less, must be respectable to some extent, right?) Noted CIS TOOL as a tool to help secure yourself... I am SURE that SLAMMER was never stated to HELP YOU SECURE YOURSELF, lol!

    ----

    "running malware is still kind of pointless" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @09:45PM (#20271119)

    &

    "Sorry, not happening until you convince me that not only is it not malware" - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @09:45PM (#20271119)

    ----

    Ok, now I have to ask the "ultimate question":

    CAN YOU PROVE THAT CIS TOOL IS MALWARE?

    ?

    (I mean, after all - you're "hinting around" how it COULD be... so, prove it!)

    You *NIX guys - you're not "real big" on proof, are you?

    History's not showing me that here, with yourself & around 30 others coming up with so much b.s. to avoid taking the multiplatform CIS TOOL test on their *NIX rigs, & putting up a better score on it than I could of 84.735/100 using Windows Server 2003 SP #2 custom-hardened!

    AND, my system was hardened with, guess what?

    WITH CIS TOOL's HELP NO LESS (based on best practices, for any OS platform it runs on, that are known... as to its checked areas & suggestions for better security, mind you!)

    APK

    P.S.=> You may get angry @ this one, but you brought it on yourself:

    "If they were, don't you think you'd see FAR more vulnerabilities in Windows, given how many more apps exist for it?" -

    Oh, I dunno about that, but... given July 2007 data, right here, in the url below?

    July 2007 - Operating System Vulnerability Scorecard:

    http://blogs.technet.com/security/archive/2007/08/ 16/july-2007-operating-system-vulnerability-scorec ard.aspx

    AND THESE, whole year long, by category...?

    WORKSTATION CLASS OS VULNERABILITIES:


    http://blogs.technet.com/blogfiles/security/Window sLiveWriter/July2007OperatingSystemVulnerabilitySc or_DB33/image_5.png

    SERVER CLASS OS VULNERABILITIES:

    http://blogs.technet.com/blogfiles/security/Window sLiveWriter/July2007OperatingSystemVulnerabilitySc or_DB33/image_7.png

    It seems that LINUX has had more problems this year, with vulnerabilities BY FAR, than Windows XP SP 2 or Windows Server 2003, period.

    apk

    1. Re:It is, too bad you are bringing it on yourself! by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      CAN YOU PROVE THAT CIS TOOL IS MALWARE?

      I can, and have, shown it to be spyware, by one of those links. You know this -- that it sends out statistical information, and that it does so without your knowledge or consent.

      What more do I need, a big sign on it that says "WARNING! VIRUS.EXE!!!"

      Oh, I dunno about that, but... given July 2007 data, right here, in the url below?

      I see "vulnerabilities fixed". Nothing about how many were actually exploited.

      Saying "this many vulnerabilities were fixed" is an even less relevant metric than "this many machines were exploited", because fixing a vulnerability is a good thing. How many vulnerabilities are still out there for Windows, unpatched, maybe undiscovered? Doesn't it make sense that Linux, with its source available, would be easier to find vulnerabilities in (and fix them)?

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  218. On SQLServer 2005, & Windows vs. Linux? See in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So, come back in five or ten years, and we can compare SQL Server 2005 -- maybe it'll be hit with a massive worm next year. Otherwise, either compare broader sets of versions, or older ones." - by SanityInAnarchy (655584) on Friday August 17, @06:43PM (#20268857)

    Well? So far?? SO GOOD (absolutely current data as of this date, today, on both per my subject line above):

    Vulnerability Report: Microsoft SQL Server 2005:

    http://secunia.com/product/6782/?task=statistics

    Zero/0 vulnerabilities in its ENTIRE HISTORY, to date (of this post/currently)...

    ----

    July 2007 - Operating System Vulnerability Scorecard:

    http://blogs.technet.com/security/archive/2007/08/ 16/july-2007-operating-system-vulnerability-scorec ard.aspx

    AND THESE, whole year long, by category...?

    WORKSTATION CLASS OS VULNERABILITIES:


    http://blogs.technet.com/blogfiles/security/Window sLiveWriter/July2007OperatingSystemVulnerabilitySc or_DB33/image_5.png

    SERVER CLASS OS VULNERABILITIES:

    http://blogs.technet.com/blogfiles/security/Window sLiveWriter/July2007OperatingSystemVulnerabilitySc or_DB33/image_7.png

    It seems that LINUX has had more problems this year, with vulnerabilities BY FAR, than Windows XP SP 2 or Windows Server 2003, period... & last year too, see next section below:

    ----

    Gee, that's NOT TOO DIFFERENT from what I saw @ year start for 2006 here, now is it:

    National Cyber Alert System: Cyber Security Bulletin 2005 year end/2006 start Summary:

    http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/bulletins/SB2005.html

    ----

    And, as far as your thinking CIS TOOL is malware?

    COMPUTERWORLD - CIS tool aims to help federal agencies check Windows security settings:

    http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?com mand=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9018362&intsrc=hm_ list

    SANS - CIS to Release Windows Configuration Assessment Tool: (May 1, 2007)

    http://www.sans.org/newsletters/newsbites/newsbite s.php?vol=9&issue=36#sID302

    2 respected places seem to state otherwise (though you TRIED to lump this program into the SAME CATEGORY AS SQLSlammer? I would STRONGLY WAGER, that the Slammer worm was NEVER noted to be for purposes of helping you, HELP YOURSELF, & aid in securing your system... as CIS TOOL is/was, per the url's above).

    ----

    You stated these objections:

    1.) This tool might be malware - I can only say, PROVE THEN THAT IT IS! (you *NIX guys, you're NOT "too big" on providing visible proofs are you? Judging by how many people have run from this multiplatform valid test of security here that are *NIX users (around 30 now)? That tends to PROVE that & "2nd my motion" on that account!)

    2.) This program may send data out I am not aware of - but, you are (they record data for security purposes, most likely noting what areas are typically found WEAKEST ON THE MOST SYSTEMS, per the data they get from this test) first of all, & secondly? Just either:

    a. Disconnect your router or PC from the net, yanking the cable IF

  219. Re:On SQLServer 2005, & Windows vs. Linux? See by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    I thought I'd get rid of this stuff first, so I can get on to the filesystem stuff. And please don't just reply to random posts of mine, completely offtopic like that -- I wasn't ignoring you, I simply didn't have a functioning machine for awhile (hardware).

    1.) This tool might be malware - I can only say, PROVE THEN THAT IT IS!

    Burden's on you to prove that it isn't.

    If it is malware, and I download it, then my system is compromised, and/or I have to spend a lot of time setting up a sandbox for it.

    If it's not malware, and I refuse to download it out of paranoia, there's no huge loss to me. Certainly nothing on the order of what I might have lost, were it malware.

    2.) This program may send data out I am not aware of - but, you are (they record data for security purposes

    Right, but they never made that clear, which means they never particularly cared whether I'd know about it or not.

    Also, I'm pointing to this as a way of questioning their credibility, same as the security hole in their own software. I'm not going to trust security testing software (or its results) from an organization that can't secure their own software and intends to collect data without my knowledge or consent.

    I know about this from the other articles you linked to. CIS said nothing about it themselves.

    3. That SeLinux know-how on your end is not needed - & you refuse to learn its "intricacies" as you put it...

    It's not needed on my end, except for running untrusted software like you've suggested. So, I'd rather not learn it unless I have a good reason to.

    Well, I proved that even IF you run an app as Non-root/non-superuser/non-administrator? An app with a buffer overflow vulnerability present in it can ESCAPE even chroot jails (the SINGLE layer of security you used, omitting chown/chmod + SeLinux layered security ontop of those, via MAC)...

    Well, I did use chown/chmod, as well as su/sudo. So, saying I used a "SINGLE" layer of security is deceptive at best.

    You're very good at sensationalist writing, and that has a place and a time -- advertising, maybe. But it has no place in a technical discussion.

    What's more, you're innaccurate here. You can put all the buffer overflow vulnerabilities you want in an app which runs as non-root, and it still won't be able to gain root or escape the chroot jail.

    What that app needs is a buffer overflow vulnerability in the kernel itself, or in an app which runs as setuserid root. About that, you're right, but the way you've phrased it, I wonder if you really understand what you're saying.

    You're also missing the "not worth my time" argument, especially true this weekend... which was when I was planning to do this, but deadlines and more deadlines, not having a computer kind of delayed that project...

    Still, it's NOT Windows, on many fronts (inclusive of security, because until somebody can show me, in a valid unfaked photo here per my challenge, a screenshot of a *NIX person exceeding my score on a VALID test of security based on "best practices" for the OS platform on which it's run in CIS TOOL? I am NOT convinced that LINUX is the way to go, & certainly NOT for security!)...

    Try it yourself.

    No, really. If you're half as paranoid about security as you should be, you won't trust any photo anyone posts here. The only way you'll get a score you can trust is to run the tool yourself. For all I care, get an install CD in the mail and run it within the live environment...

    But here's the point I seem to be having difficulty communicating with you: Neither this test, nor any test like it, can really test cross-platform. Suppose for a moment that Linux didn't support ACLs -- in that event, any reasonable cross-platform security test would omit a check of ACLs being enabled on Linux.

    So, d

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  220. Looks as though the other thread is dead... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Putting the filesystem stuff here:

    HOWEVER, the EXECUTABLE FILES page back, to their backing file on disk (their .exe named one).

    Right. This is actually intelligent, as you say, because it doesn't have to write anything to "page out".

    In fact, this would more accurately not be called "paging" so much as having stuff expire from a cache.

    In any case, I do think that having a pagefile (or swap space) makes sense, if the kernel is at least sometimes more likely to swap something out than to expire something (executable or not) from the cache. But I don't see the value of putting it in RAM -- the whole point of a pagefile is to provide more storage for when you're low on RAM, or to let the OS use the RAM for something else.

    Well, I like 1 thing about using .ini files (windows' state keeping files for apps in the old days, & currently): 1 grenade does not take out the WHOLE PLATOON... but, they're .txt text files, so their access is slower than registry binary storage.

    Linux apps tend to use text configuration files for configuration. Storage is in whatever format they want, usually binary (more like .dat), but configuration doesn't need to be fast.

    For example: My Postfix server has a configuration split across several files, some of which I've edited, some of which I deliberately have not. It reads them when it starts up, which is basically once per Postfix update or kernel update, and it reads them when I make a change. It then stores its configuration in RAM.

    (Postfix, by the way, is an example of how to design a Unix app securely. It's split into many small cooperating processes, many of which are run in a chroot which cannot be broken out of, because the app is not running as root, and there are no executable files in there -- meaning your method doesn't work.)

    Adobe Photoshop users usually, but, it makes some sense: They CAN work in some pretty LARGE data, in photography oriented data, @ least @ times & by NOT using a pagefile with that app? You had best be working with 'smaller' data (purely relative term, hence the sarcasm quotes).

    Well, first of all, on a machine with 8-16 gigs of RAM, I doubt the Photoshop guys are going to have any trouble. I'm actually fairly sure the Windows pagefile has a size limit anyway, by default.

    But that's the point -- You were advocating putting the pagefile on a ramdisk, which makes absolutely NO difference for the Photoshop guys. In fact, it may even slow them down, versus not having a pagefile.

    Lack of a pagefile.sys might 'upset' that cpu mgt./memmgt. they use

    Well, like I said, if they have that much knowledge and control over virtual memory, I see that as a design flaw. Processor affinity and thread priority is one thing, but the only place I see a point to an app knowing about swap is for it to explicitly mark a particular page as RAM-only, due to it containing sensitive information that shouldn't touch disk unencrypted.

    I may be missing something, but I just can't think of another place where it's a good idea for an app to know about the OS pagefile (or swapspace). Can you?

    Well, I can do that, right now, in Windows: IMMEDIATE REGISTRY WRITES

    I know. Every OS has some form of sync. I'm just saying that if transactions are implemented as I suggest, I don't want to lose that feature.

    Note: I already do that - search where I said about cmd.exe & COMSPEC via environmental %variables% alterations... I put my command interpreter there.

    Good. So...

    What I would recommend is making the ramdisk as small as possible (but no smaller), and turning off the pagefile if you can, otherwise sticking it on the ramdisk and turning the size limit way down on it.

    Even so, I would still e

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!