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The Biggest Roadblocks To Information Technology Development

ZDOne writes "ZDNet UK has put together a list of some of the biggest obstacles preventing information technology from achieving its true potential, in terms of development and progress. Microsoft's stranglehold on the desktop makes the list, as does the chip-makers' obsession with speed. 'There is more to computing than processor speed -- a point which can be easily proven by comparing a two-year-old PC running Linux with a new PC buckling under the weight of Vista. Shrinking the manufacturing process to enable greater speed has proven essential, but it's running out of magic ... What about smarter ways of tagging data? The semantic web initiative runs along these sorts of lines, so where is the hardware-based equivalent?'"

7 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Horrible by moogied · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The author clearly has no idea what they are saying.

    We haven't come far. Qwerty is 130 years old, and windows, icons, mice and pointers are 35. Both come from before the age of portable computing. So why are we reliant on these tired old methods for all our new form factors?

    We are reliant because they work damn good. Its not like they were the simpliest of ideas, they were just the ones taht stuck because they worked.

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    So basically, -1 troll/offtopic is really slashdots way of saying "I hate that you thought of something before me."
  2. Here's One More by puppetluva · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The insistence to present everything as a video instead of an article or good analytical summary is holding back technology information sharing (much like this video).

    I wish these outlets would stop trying to turn the internet into TV. We left TV because it was lousy.

  3. The number one problem by beavis88 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The number one problem is all the idiots who are too stubborn/stupid to learn how to use their tools. If these people knew as little about hammers and they do about computers, there wouldn't be a round thumb left in the whole goddamn world. Just because it's a computer doesn't mean you have to turn off your brain.

  4. biggest roadblocks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Management.

  5. Re:Ignorance is the biggest obstacle by BeBoxer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Think how much more productive an IT worker could be if the software tools didn't require them to learn a bunch of skills which are irrelevant to their job. Back when cars had chokes and manually adjusted spark advance, you would have been claiming how important it was for drivers to get 'basic understanding' of these things. But of course the real answer was to completely hide these details from drivers so that today they have no idea what it even means to choke an engine or advance a spark. Yes, ignorance is a problem. But it's not the users who are ignorant. It's those of us who develop and maintain the IT systems who are ignorantly blaming the users for our own failings.

  6. Re:They missed government regulation by johneee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Bull. (Mostly)

    Now, I'm Canadian, so I can't comment authoritatively on what it's like in the U.S, but your points make no sense whatsoever. Can it be argued that government gets in the way? Perhaps, but not with the examples you've given.

    Phones in cars: If it was just your life you were putting in danger, then who am I to stand in your way? However, this affects everyone around you. You become statistically more dangerous to everyone around you when you're talking on the phone while driving, and you should not have the right to do that. Governments who do this do it because more people are concerned about not getting run over by dorks who can't wait ten minutes to make their bowling plans than there are dorks.

    Restrictions on talking on the phone in airplanes: There were (valid?) concerns about cell phones interfering with airplane electronics. Now that these issues are more well understood, the restrictions are going away. Personally, I'd rather them be more safe than sorry.

    Electrical rate-hikes and forced conservation to combat Global Warming: Yup. Again, your right to run ten computers at artificially low rates that don't take into account the total cost of the power it takes (including the environmental cost) doesn't trump my right to not have my house under water in 50 years. You're using power, pay the full cost of it.

    Sarbanes-Oxley and other laws that make business finance riskier (so there are fewer tech startups): It has been proven over and over again that businesses cannot be trusted to monitor themselves, so the public says things like "they shouldn't be allowed to do that, someone should do something about it so my retirement fund doesn't dissapear!". Well, guess what? The "someone" tends to be the government, and the "something" is S-OX. Got a better way to make sure "they" can't do "that"? I'm all ears, but if you say the invisible hand of the market I'm going to flick your ear.

    And taxes, well, it costs money to do the business of government. I'd like it to be lower myself, but to say that internet shopping should be tax-free just because it's online is just arrogant and dumb. There may be other good reasons for it being tax-free, but if you want your iPod and you buy it online, you should be paying taxes just like the rest of us chumps. We can make a case for lowering taxes overall, but that's a completely different argument.

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    - ------- There are ten kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary, and those who... Huh?
  7. Software Patents by CustomDesigned · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... are the biggest roadblock to IT development. No entity, not even non-commercial open source, is safe from being sued to oblivion for the crime of not only having an idea, but implementing it. The risk is still low enough, that most of us are still taking it. But it is building like an epidemic. The only defense is a policy of Mutually Assured Destruction backed by a massive portfolio of your own asinine software patents.