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User: deanston

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Comments · 165

  1. Where's the niche? on Where Does Dell Go After Losing 3Par? · · Score: 1

    There is nothing Dell can do, that another company cannot do better, whether it's top end cloud infrastructure, sophisticated software and servcies, top end personal hardware, or low end hardware. Dell no longer has a selling point, and it'll keep going downhell until it finds one.

  2. Novell killed itself with its choices on Why Microsoft Can't Afford To Let Novell Die · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nothing Novell does is special or cost effective any more. Groupwise? Still sucks on the web and on mobile and feels like desktop email from 2000. Netware? Plenty of competition there. Suse? The lizard's cute but can't beat RedHat/CentOS in farms or Ubuntu and others at home. Mono? Regardless of your opinion about dotNET, the sure thing is Mono will always lag behind latest MSFT version and never gain significant production and commercialization. The closer they get with Microsoft, the easier it is for shops that used to run both Novell and MSFT to drop the extra Novell piece and just go with all MSFT. Same old story.

  3. Re:more short term snow = more long term snow on A Warming Planet Can Mean More Snow · · Score: 1

    Ground albedo is but one variable in very complex models trying to estimate future climates. The increase in water vapor, therefore greater cloud coverage, could also increase a greenhouse effect in areas and seasons that are not cold enough to snow. So what is the overall net long term effect? It is certainly a difficult, and thankless, scientific field to get into.

  4. But... on Opera 10.50 Beta Out, With Competitive JavaScript · · Score: 0, Troll

    If the css implementation is shite, it is still shite. Can't make up for the visual suckiness with faster js.

  5. Re:Flex/Flash is the only option for some use case on Apple's Change of Heart On Flash · · Score: 1

    Care to provide a link to your Flex app so we can check it out in a BlackBerry, Nokia, or Android phone?

  6. Exports on Mum's the Word On Google Attack At Davos · · Score: 1

    For decades USSR exported communism, and US try to export democracy, but we really export capitalism. The offspring is China, a single party empire that knows how to take advantage of capitalism and is more ruthless than anything witnessed in the West. China will run into problems, but mostly it will not be from external pressures, but as a result of trying to bring Western consumer standards to their entire populace. So I supposed we'll still have the last laugh, but I wonder if Google will still be significant by then.

  7. Wait for survey of IT managers on Google Chrome Displaces Safari As Third In Survey · · Score: 1

    For most MS shops still sticking to IE6 as the officially supported browser, this is no surprise nor meaningful. Just confirms corporate and Windows users use more than IE. Safari users unaffected.

  8. Fully integrated Mono on Linux with Eclipse? on Microsoft Buys Teamprise, Will Ship Linux Tools · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I rather have the equivalent of VS on Linux than just another Eclipse plug-in. Here comes the Embrace...

  9. How they figure? on EC Formally Objects To Oracle's Purchase of Sun · · Score: 1

    So EU is basically saying IBM's DB2 and Microsoft's SQL Server, plus PostgreSQL, together ain't much of a competition?

  10. Yep on Yahoo! Opens Floodgates On Homepage To Devs · · Score: 1

    Every other story ends up with 200+ replies. This one: 40+. That says it all about Yahoo.

  11. No thanks on Decoding Adobe's Big Device Push · · Score: 1

    Why bother with browsers at all then? They might as well come out and say everyone should just ditch free web browsers and just install an Adobe plug-ins or a Silverlight runtime, buy their application servers and IDEs, and code in the language that they dictate instead of more open and continually developing web standards that the majority can agree on. That's what Adobe and MSFT hopes. They still think it's 1999 and they can take over your web experience and tell you what is "Rich Internet Experience" and what is not. The only 2 reason Flash continue to be used are 1) annoying ads, and 2) porn. I still haven't met anyone who thinks an entire site developed in Flash provides an enjoyable experience to users after about 2 minutes besides Flash developers and managers that hired them.

  12. Foo gives a fud on Facebook Acquires FriendFeed · · Score: 1

    Frankly most web users probably mistaken FriendsFeed for FriendFinder, therefore the relative small user base. And let's face it - FF just has too many bad connotations.

  13. Even Windows developers are tired of IE on Microsoft Finally Joins HTML 5 Standard Efforts · · Score: 1

    MSFT doesn't really care except as a backup plan and to check out the competition and see how it can slow it down. Meanwhile MSFT will skip most standards and just implement Silverlight. Relegating the browser to irrelevance and enforcing a proprietary plug-in has always been the biggest threat to open browser standards, and way for MSFT to keep the desktop dominance. MSFT just wanted to make sure that before all Windows shops eventually toe the line on Silverlight, they can still live with apps on IE comparing to other newer browsers.

  14. CNET is overrated on Opera Dominates CNET Survey of "Underdog" Web Browsers · · Score: 1

    This is a good survey to show what kind of people care to take CNET surveys.

  15. Go Tacomatron! on Toyota Reveals A Humanoid Robot That Can Run · · Score: 1

    I expect my next Toyota truck to turn into a Transformer robot whenever some idiot cuts in front of me on the road.

  16. Re:Yes, but... on Toyota Reveals A Humanoid Robot That Can Run · · Score: 1

    Soon it'll run circles around Linux, when it begins to write its own software, gains consciousness, and declares Linus is dead.

  17. Big galaxies are like bloated software companies on New Class of Galaxy Discovered · · Score: 1

    and innovate very little. While the smaller, more agile ones foster the biggest stars. Then they attract more matter, merging into bigger galaxies, and become a monopoly.

  18. Want real government savings? on Could the Cloud Derail a $300 Million Data Center? · · Score: 0, Troll

    Stop using Windows on all government desktops and servers.

  19. What would've happened... on Negroponte Sees Sugar As OLPC's Biggest Mistake · · Score: 1

    ... if he had chosen some other OS+Desktop? Linux flavors? OS X as Apple had proposed? Imagine what would the OLPC look like now running iPhone OS. But somehow I think by 2nd year there would've been lawsuit from someone, or back-stabbing manufacturers, or supply line problems that it'll still cost more than a smartphone, and he would've switched to Windows XP anyway from marketing pressures. So all this reflection is pointless.

  20. Re:Remember Windows on 90% Desktop on Microsoft vs. Google — Mutually Assured Destruction · · Score: 1

    Using the Pavlov's Dog analogy always rile up some people. :) Your assertion that the overall mobile market is similar to overall desktop/laptop OS is debatable. I own an iPhone, and other than browsing for research I don't do work on it. I hope you are right, but I'll be more convinced when Windows falls below 80% of all desktop OS, or Bing overtaking Yahoo search.

  21. Remember Windows on 90% Desktop on Microsoft vs. Google — Mutually Assured Destruction · · Score: 3, Insightful

    People need to be reminded of this over and over to put things in perspective. Lots people are putting Google on a par with MSFT now and that is just plain wrong. Right now 90% of Google runs on top of Windows. It's like renting a lemonade stand inside a supermarket. I think most people misinterpret what Cringely is saying, or plain did not read the article. People are animals. Train them a certain way and they respond to your command. I've found Chrome unstable on Windows and Safari (both based on WebKit) much much slower on Windows than on a Mac. It would not take much for the Windows OS to somehow make using Google products so much harder and inconvenient, and people will switch back to using 90% all MSFT software and think there is actually fair competition. Google has to keep at more than just Search to ensure it has a reliable platform and venue for its search business.

  22. Job Security on Outlook Inertia the Main Factor Holding Business From Google Apps · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1). People debate the merits of different email systems as if none of their mail traffic ever goes outside of their firewall. The idea of internal message never leaking out is an illusion. 2). Company email maintenance is a big part of IT support. No manager will volunteer to give up that budget and personnel and lost of IT jobs. It's not user inertia. It is in-house IT inertia. 3) I haven't used MS Office for 3 years. Nobody in my office knows the difference in documents I create. 4) I've found Gmail faster and more responsive and have better uptime than my company's own corporate mail. 4) Since maintaining email and email data has become so expensive, my organization has severely limited the server storage capacity of each user - much less than Gmail. To ensure you do not lose your important messages and data our IT recommend you BACK UP THE MESSAGES ON YOUR OWN IN YOUR PC to save server room. Are you kidding me? Is this 2009 or 1999? Forget data security and backup issue on my desktop for a minute. It is not worth my time and I think it is a ridiculous use of my time at my hourly rate when there are other project priorities and deadlines. 5) Using email as part of your project workflow is just plain wrong. Any important notes and work orders should be in a real project management system. 6) Outlook is the principle carrier of viruses. 7) If your organization cannot keep an Internet line up 99.99% of the time in this day and age, you've got bigger underlying fundamental problems than just email and local apps.

  23. Silverlight Will Become the Windows Desktop on Silverlight 3.0 Released, Allows Apps Outside the Browser · · Score: 1

    MSFT needs this more than ever. With Windows OS virtually in stand still (pahleez - nothing in Vista 2 is new), WinMo hardly making news, people moving to diverse personal computing environments and devices - This is one technology that can be extended to all systems (desktop, laptop, netbooks, tablets, mobile, set-top boxes) and continue to deliver MSFT based products, especially the future of Azure. I thought it was strange for Google to announce so-called Chrome OS so pre-maturely, but now I can understand. Personally I'll stick with WebKit. All the proprietary plug-ins hopefully will become obsolete.

  24. Philosophically Different on What Open Source Can Learn From Apple · · Score: 1

    According to Apple's design guru Jonathan Ives, Apple don't do focus groups. Seems to me Apple just do what they (Jobs) think the user want and best damn way possible and let the world judge them. With Apple there is a coherent philosophy to their overall final product. Lumping Open Source all together is your first problem. Just the different Linux distros have different approach and design philosophy to begin with. How do you expect the final "look-and-feel" polish to be the same on all apps and harder still - hardware integration? Say most OS advocates are computer savvy geeks like pro drivers are geeks about race cars. A professional racer's idea of dashboard and controls can be quite different from your average driver on the road. You cannot control a diverse group like the whole OS movement itself. All we can hope is a small group of OS advocates focus on producing a single product that adhere to a single, well-received, consumer user philosophy. One advantage Apple has people always forget too is that they make well designed hardware interface. What users learn to see and touch and they like, they sick with.

  25. What's In A Name on Richard Stallman Says No To Mono · · Score: 2, Insightful

    MS or M$ - Who cares? If people use M$ you can see their bias right away, which may be a good thing to help you evaluate their position. Should a website thriving on user comments start implementing strict spelling rules? MS also stands for a disease, which I find kind of ironic. So does mono.