Posted on 12/01/2006 7:49:10 PM PST by Zakeet
As he took the stage to usher Windows Vista to market, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer last week tried to put the software's laborious birth behind him. The company's 71,000 employees -- and the entire PC industry, for that matter -- could be excused for breathing a sigh of relief, too.
"It's an exciting thing to finally be here, and that's probably all I'll say about the past," Ballmer said at the unveiling from Nasdaq's cylindrical high-tech building in New York's Times Square. Office 2007 and Exchange Server 2007 also were introduced, and 30 more products will follow over the next year, all part of the same technology wave. "This is the biggest launch we've ever done," Ballmer said. Microsoft will spend $450 million marketing it all.
Yet for all the design missteps, overly ambitious plans, and personnel changes that led to a five-year lag between versions of Windows, questions about the future of Microsoft's software are top of mind for customers and partners. Ballmer swears to never let as much time elapse between Windows versions; the question now is how the company can keep churning out innovative products on a compressed timetable.
"Vista is the last of the Big Bang operating system releases from Microsoft," Credit Suisse research analyst Jason Maynard wrote in a report last month.
(Excerpt) Read more at informationweek.com ...
It does more things for NTFS like fix and defrag the index files and security descriptors that can't be touched after the system is booted. Even disk defragmenters can't defrag them. Supposedly Vista is supposed to be able to do those sorts housekeeping chores without rebooting which would be great for servers.
Oh, sorry. I understood you to say that you didn't know what chkdsk was, and it was very common command to use on the DOS systems. Again, sorry for addressing it.
Windows 2000 was the best operating system they ever made. Even the propeller heads who like Linux give grudging respect (not much).
hey no apologies necessary, I would have read it the same too.
LOL! Careful when visiting a Home Depot or modern grocery store!
Should have said
to many "other" options available
my bad.
;)
That makes more sense.
Excellent!
Looks like exactly the thing. We may well be adding OSX to our household sometime this next year.
Didnt know that, thanks for the info. Now Im more excited then ever to own a Mac!!!
Quite possibly the "best" MS-Windows OS, but hardly the best OS ever made. That would be VMS.
Tagline for TV, print and billboard ad copy, accompanied by a Windows logo covered by the universal circle with a crossbar symbol:
Come see your Apple dealer for a defenestration!
1) The game isn't over.
B) Who gives a rat's hindquarters about market share? Apple makes better computers. Windows sells more. Cockroaches are more numerous than humans. If more folks are using Windows, that's their problem, not mine.
III) Worst. Haiku. Ever.
Tevanian, now
they're booting Windows, meanwhile
supercomputers
are being replaced
by configurations of
standard Windows things. *
# 47 on the worldswide supercomputer list is an Apple cluster. No Microsoft code to be found in the top 100. I can't imagine why; I mean, Windows loses a lot of performance overhead to crufty code, but at least the security is craptacular.
Reading your referenced article, it looks like Microsoft is looking to get into high-end computing -- but they're not "replacing supercomputers." They're starting to think about kind of competing with the supercomputers of 20 years ago. Welcome to the party.
It is nice to dream,
but the knee-jerk, mindless hate
of Microsoft is
wildly misplaced.
Knee-jerk, mindless hatred is always misplaced. My dislike of most Microsoft products is neither knee-jerk nor mindless. I've actually had to use the crap.
Neither Google nor Apple
exists as a threat
So tell me, do you drink the kool-aid before or after you whistle past the graveyard? 'Cause it seems like if your mouth is dry, the whistling might be kind of difficult; but if you drink the kool-aid before, all that sugar might gum up the whistling.
Nah, just forget about all of us wild-eyed dreamers and paid shills. You're right; Microsoft's grip on desktop computers is every bit as secure as the beachheads established by Underwood typewriters, IBM mainframes and Edison mimeograph machines.
CHKDKS /F ??? Hm...new command??? :)
I like it. I like it a lot. If i find the time, look for it on YouTube.
Q: What's the internal Microsoft term for "beta testers?"
A: Customers.
No, old typo.
I have a blue white powermac G3 of 1998 vintage. It runs the current version of the OS and all the basic apps, connects to the wireless network and taps into the shared MP3 server. It's certainly no speed demon, but it's a capable machine for all the stuff above, plus Web browsing and most streaming video.
It's on a rolling cart in my guest room. I thought, guest bedroom, why not a guest computer? Folks like to check their e-mail in private. If they want, I can completely wipe their account and history when they leave. I take Southern hospitality seriously. And besides, giving guests their own computer keeps them from asking to use mine. Everyone wins.
Thanks, HAL!!
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