Microsoft Clips Longhorn 657
Gr8Apes writes "Microsoft is clipping Longhorn to get the already-delayed follow-up to Windows XP out the door by 2006. MS has decided to remove some of the most ambitious features. Blackcomb is the version to follow Longhorn, and is expected at the end of the decade. The full new file system feature has been moved to Blackcomb. Other notable parts of the story, in MS's efforts to get its DRM into play, a new version, Windows XP Premium will start shipping with new PCs, which will include a new version of the infamous Windows Media Player. This version will have the ability to shop at on-line stores like the one MS plans to launch later this year. It's their move to 'outflank Apple'."
WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no network (Score:5, Informative)
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:5, Funny)
You could submit a story that Microsoft causes cancer, and they'd publish it with a bunch of spoof or dead links without batting an eye.
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:5, Funny)
That would just be tit-for-tat. Forrester Research has already concluded that Linux/J2EE causes colon cancer [theserverside.com]
Re: Future of Samba (Score:3, Interesting)
This seems like a not so sneaky move by Microsoft to shut out interoperability between linux and windows platforms. I am VERY glad therefore, that this is still 5 years off at the earliest.
Maybe we can start calling Blackcomb the Death Star.
OK I'm being a little extreme here, but if my company upgrades to Windows Blackcomb and I can't interoperate over a PPTP connection, I'll have to dump li
Re: Future of Samba (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Future of Samba (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: Future of Samba (Score:5, Informative)
Re: Future of Samba (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.tomshardware.com/storage/20040129/in
Re: Future of Samba (Score:5, Informative)
I have a beta copy of Longhorn running here on a desktop. WinFS is running on the My Documents portion of the drive, and I can still share this as normal over the network without problems from both other Windows boxes and my Redhat box. Incidentally, at one point WinFS was slated to only run under My Documents, so I was actually more surprised to see that a full OS-wide implementation of it was still on the cards. Suffice to say that my experience of its current implementation has been very good - it definitely is an improvement over current filing systems, especially regarding search operations.
If you want more info on it, there's a Windows Media file here [microsoft.com] which goes into some detail about WinFS, how it works and its pros and cons.
Re: Future of Samba (Score:4, Informative)
Samba will continue. Not everyone will upgrade to Whistler or Blackcomb. Remember, Microsoft is STILL! trying to push users off Windows 95, 98, and NT, and it's already been several years since XP was released. Imagine the uphill battle in several years to get businesses off 2000...
This seems like a not so sneaky move by Microsoft to shut out interoperability between linux and windows platforms.
So what? Microsoft Windows Professional (2000/XP) and NT Workstation/Server, as far as I know, have generally included downgrade options. So in 2006, build your next PC with an OEM license for "Whistler" (just get the Pro edition) and use your Windows 2000 media.
Read the OEM EULA. Note that this does not apply to retail versions unless you do volume licensing with Microsoft.
Same goes for Server versions, if you're into that kind of thing. I, however, for one, have given up on Windows servers and have moved to Linux/Samba already. Reason: Microsoft may say the TCO for Windows is much lower than Linux, but they neglect all the other software you need to buy for Windows to make it actually do something (antivirus, mail server, more antivirus, defrag programs, database servers, and so forth).
The biggest mistake that can be made is to use the Home version of Windows. It not only is a crippled version of the Professional version (at least, when you define crippled as having certain features, e.g., logging in to a network), but it doesn't have any downgrade rights AT ALL.
I don't know anything about the WinFS network formats, and if they will include the ability of backwards compatibility with other OS types on the network.
If Microsoft all of a sudden turns off backwards compatibility, businesses will cry foul. If Windows isn't backward compatible, then what's the point of keeping it on a corporate network?
Either businesses will stick to their "legacy" Windows 2000 and XP or begin migrating to other platforms. I can envision the former in many small businesses without dedicated techs and the latter in larger corporations.
---
Offtopic, if there are
Re: Future of Samba (Score:3, Interesting)
This is a really good point for those worried about compatibility. As far as I understand it, Longhorn(or whatever the real name will be) will require higher hardware specs than Win 9.x or even XP. A lot of people will keep upgrading their hardware like normal, but I think there are a bunch of useful machines out there that won't get tossed out. I'm not sure a 3D interface and a new file system will compel most businesses to invest i
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't see a compelling reason for the existance of this "upgrade" other than to feed the M$ coffers and lock in a steady revenue stream for them. The main features seem to be:
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:4, Interesting)
I think that really depends on what business you are in.
I'll launch Windows Media Player 5-10 times a day for work.
I might launch Excel, or even the calculator, once every 6 months or so.
Some people work in industries where music and videos ARE the business, and they ARE the data. And those businesses need DRM in order to make their business viable in the digital age.
Now if people actually paid for what they use, it would be a different story. But some people are under the impression that since they borrowed a CD from a friend, and copied that CD to their computer, it is now THEIR data. Without any regard to the effort and talent that went into creating the music. So the choice is- make it harder for these people to copy the data, or hope that they have a change of heart, and start to pay up.
I don't see a long line of people waiting to pay up...
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, its a shame that last year was such a banner year for the music industry. CDs sell plenty. I have difficulty seeing how the industry is being hurt when they're making more money than ever. If there was actually a drop in sales in the last few years that didn't correlate exactly with the general economic downturn there might be something to those lies.
The problem is that while trying to eliminate a "piracy" problem that doesn't really exist ("Yarrrrr!"), they're making it more difficult to legally use the music one purchases.
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, because it's totally obvious that somebody should be paid over and over and over for something that they only did the work to create once. People should be paid for providing goods or services, not because they think they "deserve it".
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone with good sound cards and a second computer can use it to record what they play back on their first, which after a single analog step gives them a digital copy with better quality than most of the (128kbps) MP3s on the net. There is no technological way to prevent this: if it can be heard or seen, it can be recorded digitally, and once one person records it in an unencrypted digital format it's just as easy to spread around as if it had never been in an encumbered format at all.
If your business model really requires impenetrable DRM to be viable, you probably ought to find a new one before spending too much money on snake oil.
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:3, Insightful)
One episode of South Park had the town trying to free a serial baby murderer. The judge asked "tell me one positive thing about killing babies." One of the kids answered "well, its easy."
Well yeah it probably is, physically, pretty easy. Babies are typically much smaller, weaker and more fragile than most adults. But that doesn't mean that everyone is going to go around killing babies. In fact almost no one does. Why not? Because its wrong. True its illegal, but even i
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:5, Interesting)
I attempted to get a group of admins to use them to make two bickering departments happy about file locations and they basically laughed at me (^)...using shortcuts instead as "good enough".
This, btw, did not settle the arguments since neither liked shortcuts and still "couldn't find anything".
(^. I would feel insulted or take them seriously, though the same admins thought it was OK to use the default database admin account name and the default -- *blank* -- password on the primary image database server. It only processed 50,000 checks up to and beyond $100,000 USD, so maybe they were right to not bother with a password -- such trivial amounts after all. :-/ )
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, there's room for improvement
Re:WinFS WILL be in the next version, just no netw (Score:4, Interesting)
First, a folder and a junction pointing to it are *indistinguishable*. Looking in explorer, you can't tell which is the original folder and which is the junction.
Second, it's possible to create a junction pointing to a parent folder - thus creating an infinite-depth tree. (This is why you can't hard link directories in *nix!)
Third, if you delete a junction, you also delete all of the contents of the folder the junction pointed to. The original folder remains, but it is left empty.
All these considered, I really wonder what the hell MS was thinking.
Clipping Longhorn (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:3, Insightful)
A platform that will let you browse, email, and generally enjoy the Internet without risk of viruses, trojans, worms or spam.
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:5, Insightful)
.....If only such a platform existed. I would buy it. Unfortunately, not even Linux, BSD, or even OS X is capable of this. There is always risk. The point is to minimize the risk, but you can never eliminate it.
bullshit (Score:4, Interesting)
While it's technically possible to break the box open and mess with it, it should be immune to viruses and trojans. Spam is another matter of course, but disallowing the posting of an email address on a form might help.
If you still want to buy it, I can get you some.
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:4, Interesting)
No platform, especially one deployed at such great lengths, will be 100% secure... There are just too many things that could possibly cause problems.
Would it be economically viable for MS to develop this? I doubt it.
Why not just make all versions of Windows "Secure" then?
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:5, Interesting)
Windows' security is the number one issue facing the company, and this is by their own declaration.
More functionality makes more complexity, which creates more security vulnerabilities.
Microsoft's users are currently seriously exposed to trojans, worms, and viruses. The advice of "protect your systems" is useless, even malicious, when 95% of PC users are technically naive, and when this is the very reason that Windows has spread to every corner of the PC market.
Microsoft's core market consists of people who cannot install patches, who don't know the different between spams and real emails, and who have a finite capacity for being hit by malware before they will abandon the Internet or find alternative platforms.
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly. Remember the old adage, "wait for Service Pack 1", when it comes to deploying Microsoft products. Given their horrible track record as of late it has now become "wait for Service Pack 2".
I recently had to do a fresh installation of Windows XP from a CD. This version of XP included Service Pack 1. I was absolutely stunned at the amount of time I had to spend patching the thing. There were literally 20+ patches, security roll-ups and service packs to applications (Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, etc.) that had to be downloaded from Windows Update. If I wouldn't have had a broadband connection I would have been online forever downloading it all.
That is just simply unacceptable. I won't be recommending that anyone who is stuck using Microsoft products upgrade to a new release until Service Pack 2 from this point forward. Microsoft needs to just chill out on the operating system releases and get everything patched and tightened down in the current OS. Once they've gotten their bases covered, then use that secure code base as the basis for the next operating system. The problem is that as soon as Microsoft releases an OS they are already working on the next one. Security holes propagate from one OS to the next generation OS which can cause even more unforeseen problems in features being worked on in the next generation OS.
Microsoft really needs to cease all work on Longhorn, tighten down XP, merge the security fixes back into the Longhorn code base, and then work from there. The problem is their stupid new licensesing scheme. Forcing users to buy into "Software Assurance" in order to get future upgrade at a discounted rate has really forced Microsoft's hand. If thy were to stop and shore up their current code base before releasing their next OS (thus delaying it further), all of the customers who have bought into their new licensing scheme are going to be very unhappy. If they continue their current way of doing things, they are going to continue alienating their customers with security problem after security problem. They are really damned if they do and damned if they don't hear, but it is their own fault They got themselves into this mess with sloppy software engineering practices and a stupid licensing scheme that forces their them into delivering upgrades within a certain timetable.
Linux is looking better and better by the minute.
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, I *do* honestly think that. Consider the case of the web server: Apache has a couple more servers than IIS, yet my access logs show about 30 attempts a day to propogate IIS worms. Not Apache worms: IIS worms. This despite Apache's popularity.
The problem is only partly MS-Windows' popularity. The heart of the problem is that, well, MS-Windows sucks, security-wise.
Microsoft's main problem is their insistence on making everything brain-dead easy, without really making things easy. Double-click on an attachment, and it will blindly run whatever code is attached! Yeah, that's just fuckin' brilliant. Even better: base file type on a three-letter extension, then *hide that extension from the user!* Yeah. Even *more* fuckin' brilliant.
Yes, Linux will eventually become easier to use, so users can install their own software packages without root privs, etc. But so far, the track record indicates that the Linux distribution producers will avoid the same stupid mistakes Microsoft enthusiastically embraces in the basic design.
Maybe not. But so far, it looks promising.
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:4, Insightful)
WE ALL KNOW THAT NOTHING IS 100% SECURE.
it's not that linux etc. are 100% secure, it's that they are orders of magnitude more secure than a product that costs orders of magnitude more money.
do you guys have day jobs as lobbyists for anti-safety legislature or something? "well congressman, no car will be 100% safe so what's the point of wanting us to provide seatbelts/air bags/crumple zones/non-exploding gas tanks?
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:3, Funny)
No platform, especially one deployed at such great lengths, will be 100% secure... There are just too many things that could possibly cause problems.
Well lets say I develop an OS that is REALLY buggy, but I am the only person to use it, nobody will exploit it because they dont even know it exists! Now I then sell this OS to EVERYONE in the world, and everyone has an OS that nobody can exploit!
Muhhahaha!! I am rich AND secure! Life is good!
Now I do think im missing so
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:3, Funny)
Microsoft Linux is due out 2007, right after the breakup (of MS that is).
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:4, Funny)
MS Products NOT secure. (Score:4, Insightful)
If you simply open a mail right now - a maliciously created one - you can have code run as your user. (http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/techalerts/TA04-099A.
No AV signature.
No patch available.
No need to click on an attachment.
Firewalls don't block it.
No need to download it with p2p.
Windows is NOT secure - the design choices they made remove the seperation between data and functional code, removes the seperation between priveldged user and non-priv, and as a result, its just a matter of WHEN the vulnerabilities are found.
You listed ways to mitigate the insecurity - doesnt change the fact that it IS insecure.
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:5, Informative)
Windows Media Player seems to have the startling ability to launch IE to view websites which are somehow embedded in (at least) video files. An ambitious coder could embed a link in a video file to a site which exploits a vulnerability and run arbitrary code.
Re:Microsoft needs exactly ONE new product (Score:4, Informative)
Re:So what you're saying is... (Score:3, Insightful)
Vegas, a good place for a Naming Convention (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Vegas, a good place for a Naming Convention (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, they take the names from ski areas in British Columbia. I think Longhorn is a bar on Whistler mountain.
the words of several hundred CTOs: (Score:5, Funny)
why did I sign up for that stupid upgrade plan? WHY???
Re:the words of several hundred CTOs: (Score:5, Interesting)
Why didn't I become a plumber?
Blackcomb (Score:3, Funny)
I guess we can expect it in 2013 at the earliest.
Re:Blackcomb (Score:4, Funny)
Patch installation (Score:2, Insightful)
Not here (Score:5, Funny)
Not in Europe, we're going to get the "Windows XP Premium Lite" edition, hah!
Re:Not here (Score:3, Insightful)
James
On the flipside... (Score:5, Funny)
Buy an operating system, and a PC comes with it? Hasn't it traditionally been the other way around?
Office politics (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the growing popularity of Linux in the server market, and over the next 2 years or so in the desktop market too, is a big part of that decision...
Simon.
Re:Office politics (Score:5, Interesting)
if Win98 is already considered obsolete, and win ME will be gone in another year at best. Meaning that "all" MS oses is really only Win2K & XP right now!
Smart Move (Score:4, Insightful)
There are so many 'features' of their Longwait that literally scare the you know what out of people. Features that have been around spooking before.
Now MS are hard put and have to remove (or delay) these features - and ironically, and sadly, this might actually help their acceptance.
The EU Will have a field day.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Outflank == Copy (Score:3, Insightful)
Guess they gotta keep innovating the old fashioned Microsoft way.
Uh (Score:5, Insightful)
Innovating the old-fashioned Linux way--ripping things off then criticizing the company that came up with the ideas.
Re:Outflank == Copy (Score:3, Informative)
fs
p.s. That list is in no particular order and only an item are two are thrown in for chuckles.
Clips Longhorn (Score:3, Funny)
-So then it's Shorthorn!
infamous (Score:4, Funny)
It's more than famous, it's infamous. (With apologies to The Three Amigos! [imdb.com]).
less features, more security and stability = GOOD (Score:5, Insightful)
What remains? (Score:3, Insightful)
So, can anybody point out which features would be really worth an upgrade, because I can't see any. I don't care about Eyecandy, also there should be something else than eyecandy...
Re:What remains? (Score:3, Informative)
BTW, if you think Avalon is just about "graphics effects like transparency" you obviously don't get it. I think Avalon is the single most exciting thing about Longhorn - the ability to break the link between screen resolution and size of items on screen is great.
So basically... (Score:3)
Re:What remains? (Score:5, Insightful)
Probably I'm "obviously" not getting it, so maybe you can explain what features exactly will be different from KDE today and why they will make life easier.
Re:What remains? (Score:5, Informative)
It's miles ahead compared to their old command prompt emulator in Windows XP already in the beta I have, and seems to finally catch up with well-known unix shells and in some cases race beyond some of them (IMHO of course!). It also by default uses command aliases like "ls", "rm", "ps", "pwd", etc.
It can finally transparently access other file systems by "mounting" (not sure if the term is that, but the end result is the same) them through "providers" so you can for example navigate through your registry without having to rewrite the "cd" command, list the contents of a DNS server with the "ls" command, and so on, and lots lots more. So, in other words, they've got rid of the hard coded "C:\" and similar one-letter drives, and C: will just be a pointer to the FileStore (FS) provider. Finally I can do it the Amiga way and create drives like FONTS:, haha...
I must say I was fascinated by some parts, even if I've used a bunch of *nix shells in the past. Especially because it's completely object oriented. Here's an example script:
$p = get/process
foreach ($p)
{
$p.FileName.ToString()
}
Of course, "ps" is just an alias for the "get/process" command and when you just type "ps" in the console, it just uses its method for console output to generate the text you see. I find this one of the most exciting features of Longhorn myself, and was pleasantly surprised by it, since I had thought MS would go all eye candy and hide their command prompt even further in the "don't go here"-corners of the OS.
A very incomplete list off the top of my head (Score:5, Informative)
* Avalon--presentation system that is completely hardware-accelerated and vector-based. One video showed two Notepads rotating around while still completely usable at the same time a video played in Media Player. Old apps will be compatible.
* XAML and other technologies--I've said it before, but it was just such a cool example. During an MSDN video (freely available at the site), the dev used Win32 Emacs to write a 10-15 XAML app that let him update his blog, complete with resized vector graphics and a video of moving clouds looping on the background of the window, all using the command-line
* WinFS will still exist. They're just cutting a few features that will probably be re-introduced in a service pack anyway. WinFS is incredibly exciting--one WinFS dev went to the command line and did a query for certain employees within the last week, and it came up in less than a second. No more brute-force searching. Also, no file drives. And yet, they're retaining folder and drive structures in case you want to operate that way.
* Aero--this is their top-secret interface yet to be unvieled. See, Longhorn has multiple tiers of visual operation. If you can't handle the effects, it scales back to a lesser tier, going all the way down to an unaccelerated 2D inteface like that of Windows 2000. Aero is the top tier and is supposed to be, according to them, "photorealistic" and will be a new interface for Windows taking advantage of 3D acceleration. They said they don't want to reveal any of it until release because they fear it will be ripped off by competitors (a fair judgment considering all the ripped-off Start menus and taskbars on standard Linux desktops...).
* Christ, man, there's more, but I'll get accused of being a Microsoftie even more than the trolls already do, so I'll stop.
More Obvious Product Tying (Score:5, Insightful)
Can an MS expert answer some questions please? (Score:3, Interesting)
2. If so, does this strike anyone else as a really bad idea from the view of modularity, scalability, and security?
2. Will Longhorn keep the Windows Registry?
Re:Can an MS expert answer some questions please? (Score:5, Insightful)
No, the Registry has an access-control/authorization subsystem very similar to the file system.
2. If so, does this strike anyone else as a really bad idea from the view of modularity, scalability, and security?
It would be a bad idea, if it was the case (which it is not).
3. Will Longhorn keep the Windows Registry?
Absolutely. There are way too many third-party applications that leverage the registry to eliminate it. If MS were to eliminate the registry, they would have the same outcry that took place when they locked down the file system. See, prior to Windows 2000, users and applications could write anywhere in the file system. Lots of (badly-written) application would sprinkle their configuration files all over the place. This was clearly a problem with ISVs, so MS took action and enforced that (by default) users could only write into their user profile directory. Well, everyone complained that MS "broke" all their apps... but the real culprit was all these poorly-written apps that were dumping user configuration information into files like C:\WINDOWS\config.ini
Re:Can an MS expert answer some questions please? (Score:4, Interesting)
Microsoft has a feature (which can be enabled) whereby when initiates the installation of a software package, the installation program runs under the credentials of the system account. Like any security feature, it may be nice for some situations (as an admin you don't have to truck on over the user to log on every time they wanna install something) and bad for others (potential security hole). The choice is yours to make as an administrator. But it is a nice middle ground between allowing a user to run as administrator of his/her box all day long (due to risk of trojans, etc), and having to baby-sit them every time they want to install something new.
So the ACL system is pretty effective, so long as users don't run as Administrator of the computer. Microsoft best practices are to NOT have the user run as Administrator of the computer. Unfortunately, many companies don't follow this advice. See, unfortunatley, many poorly-written third party apps require rights to certain areas of the file system or registry, and they are old programs that worked fine before such systems were locked down (for good security reasons) by Microsoft. Due to reasons unknown (frugality, probably) most companies aren't willing to go through the work of finding out what registry settings each of 300+ applications need and developing a script to give users access to those areas. So they take the short route and give users full control of the Registry, or of the box. And that gives virii/trojan horses fertile ground to wreak havok.
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, MS is aware that the actions of 3rd party apps reflect upon them. The Designed for Windows XP [microsoft.com] logo is the carrot/stick that they use to get developers to stick to these (and other) standards.
Although I haven't read these docs in a while, I don't see Microsoft changing the Registry scheme. It has proven to be a pretty robust methodology provided it is used intelligently by the applications that leverage it.
The requirements you describe are met by providing applications
Anti-Competitive Behavior (Score:5, Interesting)
Have the previous cases not established precedent that pre-installing non-essential features into the operating system constitutes anti-competitive behavior?
Rather than putting our hope in the courts, I think it's best if everybody contributes as much as possible to the development of desktop linux. We have a two-year window. If linux can achieve mainstream acceptance by the time this goes gold, then we'll be able to avoid widespread adoption of Longhorn, Blackcomb, and everything after.
so anybody got a good project that needs testers? Or documentation-authors?
WinFS quite ambitious (Score:5, Insightful)
Paul Thurrott's supersite for Windows has this information about what Longhorn is all about [winsupersite.com] from May 2003. I highly recommend that readers check out what MSDN [microsoft.com] has to say about it.
It is a document and content management system with synchronization capabilities built right into the desktop. And it is going to hit yet another software segment right in the pocketbook: document management and storage.
With the advances in disk drive capacity and network speed, imagine being able to sync your company's entire set of PDF files/engineering drawings/(pr0n? ;-) ) to a laptop for use on site.
Re:WinFS quite ambitious (Score:3, Interesting)
Ummm...you can do this now. It's called Briefcase. I use it all the time.
Personally, WinFS scares the crap out of me. It looks far to complicated than it needs to be for casual users. The schema itself looks like a nightmare. Having the ability to transport properties from documents into the fs is cool, but most peop
WTF?!?! (Score:5, Interesting)
This is seriously screwed up. If this isn't a blatant anti-trust violation, I don't know what is. Didn't the EU just assess a 1/2 billion dollar fine over this very behavior?
I can't understand how this doesn't enrage anyone who believes in capitalism. What's to stop Microsoft from integrating an Amazon.com, paypal and Ebay feature into their software and MSN stuff as well? How many markets will they be able to dominate through their desktop OS monopoly?
Can any investor look at the tech world and invest in something that isn't in danger of being killed off by a Microsoft action? It seems that entering into any online service or consumer software is a matter of picking up dimes before steamrollers.
Without proper anti-trust enforcement, innovation and investment opportunities will dwindle. Maybe some of our politicians should get their heads out of the sand. The market doesn't solve all problems, that's why we have anti-trust laws in place.
Seriously though, isn't anyone else just amazed by Microsoft's gall?
Re:WTF?!?! (Score:3, Insightful)
It is, and as you've noted, it's a glaringly obvious one at that. Aside from this, we see an article above where the text mentions "increased competition" to OpenGL from D3D. Another abuse of monopoly power. The OGL implementations I've seen so far way out-perform D3D. The problem is that D3D ships with 90+ per cent of the new desktop
Blackcomb? (Score:3, Funny)
Gates: "Brilliant!"
New Guy: "But sirs, we can see Mr. Ballmer's baldspot. It blinded half the staff at the softball game."
Ballmer: "The folks from New Dehli love my full head of hair."
New Guy: "Brilliant!"
Longhorn FUD has hurt some companies... (Score:5, Interesting)
Doesnt Apple do the same thing? (Score:3, Insightful)
Doesnt itunes come with every computer purchased with MacOSX? And doesnt itunes, by default, have ITMS (iTunes music store) capability?
So how is MS now including WMP any different than apple always including Itunes+ITMS? It seems like its just the
Re:Doesnt Apple do the same thing? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Doesnt Apple do the same thing? (Score:3, Insightful)
MONOPOLY Re:Doesnt Apple do the same thing? (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple does not have a monopoly status!
Microsoft has a monopoly status!
When you have a monopoly the rules change! You cannot use your monopoly status to "sell"/push your other products!
Apples move is not the same as microsofts (Score:3, Informative)
The thing Microsoft is talking is locking in with OTHER vendors, to expand a monopoly...
That's a different sort of issue. One is illegal, the other isn't.
Remember too, that the rules of business change when you are CONVICTED of being a monopoly.. or at least they are supposed to.. seems nothing is being enforced..
Re:Doesnt Apple do the same thing? (Score:4, Insightful)
Mm, no, MS was found guilty by the US courts of illegally abusing its monopoly position to destroy its competition. It's also just been found guilty by the EU of exactly the same anti-competitive practices, and had its offices raided in Japan as part of an investigation into, yup, you guessed it, monopolistic practices.
Apple can bundle whatever software it likes with a Mac - at 3% market share, it's not going to have a monopoly on the desktop any time soon. Hell, you can even delete iTunes if you want, and it's gone forever. But if MS puts its own music portal in as part of WMP and it can't be removed, just like they claim IE is a vital part of the system (*coughhorseshitcough* - why make a frickin' internet browser a key part of your OS unless it was a sneaky way to lock in users and destroy the competition?), then they're abusing their monopoly position yet again, breaking the law and the terms of the DoJ settlement - and apparently not caring in the least, since the current administration couldn't give a rat's ass about monopolies as long as they get their cut.
Be nice if Nader won, if only to see the look on Bill's face!
Re:Doesnt Apple do the same thing? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Doesnt Apple do the same thing? (Score:4, Informative)
How exactly is Apple monopolistic?
Does Apple own the Power PC processor architecture? They used to be a financial contributor, but from what I've seen, its basically an IBM and Motorola (Motorola being the short bus rider of the two) show. And it looks like IBM will be pushing mobos using PowerPC 970 (the G5) chips for Linux enthusiasts so Apple doesn't even have exclusivity on one of its compelling selling points.
Does Apple restrict retailers from bundling Yellow Dog Linux distributions with its hardware? (like Microsoft did against Digital Research's CP/M, DR-DOS, and GEM? IBM's OS/2? BeOS? Linux?). And speaking of Linux, behind the scenes, Apple isn't trying to cripple Linux distributions from running on its hardware via BIOS chipsets like Microsoft is with the "Trusted Computing" scheme either. You might also check the various operating systems XServe is certified with as well...
Does Apple build a web-browser to crush competitors that flaunts standards like Microsoft's Internet Explorer? Nope...Safari is based upon an open-source web browser (Konqueror/KHTML) for Linux, and Apple is an active code contributor.
Does Apple try to crush open source operating systems like Microsoft does with Linux? Nope. Apple's OS X is built atop Free BSD, a Unix deriviative.
Does Apple push its own instant messaging program in an effort to crush other market leaders like Microsoft does? Nope, iChat is a repackaged (industry market share leader) AOL Instant Messenger with extra nifty features.
Does Apple push a self-serving music format to perpetuate its operating system monopoly like Microsoft? Nope. Apple's iTunes uses the AAC format, which was developed by Dolby, not Microsoft. And the iTunes Music Store is available on both the Windows and Mac platforms. Sure, we can argue it should be issued for the Linux platform as well and that the iPod should also throw in support for OGG, but those accessory issues to this argument.
Does Apple push a proprietary graphics API onto the industry like Microsoft does with D3D/DirectX? Nope, Apple supports OpenGL.
Has Apple tried to squash Adobe's PDF file format like Microsoft is trying to do via Microsoft patented XML schemes via Office 2003? Nope, Apple has thrown its support behind PDF.
Since starting and later retreating from the PDA market, has Apple tried to cripple Palm in any manner like Microsoft has? Nope, Apple has gone out of its way to support Palm OS products with native support.
Does Apple try to push its own mobile phone platform onto the industry like Microsoft? Nope. Apple in fact is the computer company that has done the most to support Bluetooth directly in its operating system. If you don't believe me, try to sync a Bluetooth equipped phone (say, a Sony Ericsson phone like the T616) on a Windows machine and then on a Mac.
Is Apple trying to muscle its way into the growing internet search business like Microsoft's designs against Google? Nope. The Safari web brower, like Mozilla FireFox, has a built-in Google Search window. I concede that there are rumors that Apple is in negotiations behind-closed-doors with Yahoo about throwing its support behind Yahoo's Search. But supporting either of these giants is different than Microsoft trying to keep its operating system monopoly from disappearing.
And despite favoring its own technology such as Firewire, it was Apple who legitimized Intel's USB platform (itself a deriviative of Atari's SIO port on the 400/800 8-bit computer line from 1979 and created by the same engineer
nice, really nice (Score:4, Insightful)
Shouldn't biased opinions and criticism only be present in readers comments ?
"Clips" longhorn?? (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe I used Office too much
WinFS now delayed for over a decade. (Score:3, Interesting)
Since then, they've talked about this feature for every single release of the NT family.
It's a mirage, receding into the distance faster than you approach it.
Re:WinFS now delayed for over a decade. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:WinFS now delayed for over a decade. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:WinFS now delayed for over a decade. (Score:3, Interesting)
What are the advantages of a database filesystem other than being able to associate metadata to it?
Wait just a freakin' second. (Score:3, Interesting)
Software engineers.
What does it take to get software engineers?
Cash money.
What does Microsoft have more of in its bank account than any other company on Earth?
Cash money.
What does America have millions of now that India has learned to code?
Unemployed software engineers.
What did Microsoft get when Bush became President?
A big "job-creation" tax cut.
What are Microsoft not doing even though they have a desperate need and a mandate from the nation?
Creating jobs.
Is anyone else wondering just what that tax cut was really for? Is anyone else wondering just what Microsoft is really for? Is anyone ever going to vote for these guys or give Microsoft any monopolistic slack again?
Obligatory Matrix comparison (Score:3, Funny)
"Later this year, it (MSFT) plans to begin a new marketing campaign, dubbed internally as Windows XP Reloaded."
Sounds appropriate... incredible special effects, which turn out to be mere bells & whistles to make up for the lack of substance. Brilliant!
Office wasn't going to work on other versions. (Score:5, Insightful)
Windows leaders are meeting through the middle of April to make the hard decisions about which specific features to cut from the operating system."
Only Microsoft would call that a feature.
Over all bad news for microsoft. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a part of every product cycle (Score:4, Insightful)
The most important feature of every product is its shipping. You can have a perfect OS with all the features everyone wants, but if you haven't shipped it nobody gives a crap (and money either). You can cut back in two ways - on quality (which simply doesn't work for big projects because problems start stepping on each other's toes) and on features (which is what I believe is happening).
Re:New Windows versions being programmed in India (Score:4, Funny)
Re:XP SP2 (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Outflank Apple? (Score:5, Insightful)
B) No matter how paltry the Apple market share, it's still several times larger than the one Linux currently 'enjoys'.
C) MS are scared shitless of Linux. Apple are a contour of the same threat.
D) Apple - and NeXT - have often set design standards. MS are watching developments here all the time.
E) The weather is currently bad in the Seattle area. MS are being sued all over the place, and more and more companies and institutions and governments are fleeing the MS camp. MS have to play it careful or lose everything.
F) The iPod might sell, but Xserve has received a lot of R&D attention. MS don't have anything like this.
Conclusion? There is a flank. There is enough of a flank for MS to be worried, just as the Halloween Docs show they were worried six years ago, long before Herr Torvalds got to Mars.
Re:2000 Pro vs. XP Pro (Question) (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:2000 Pro vs. XP Pro (Question) (Score:3, Informative)
The only person that I know that had an issue with activation was someone who changed their motherboard out. After the re-activation failed, he just called the number that it told him to, explained what he did, and in 5 minutes he had a new activation code and no problems.
Product activation was just a Red Herring that fa
Re:Surprising? (Score:3, Informative)