Skip to comments.
Microsoft's plans for post-Windows OS revealed
SDTimes.com ^
| July 29, 2008
| David Worthington
Posted on 07/31/2008 10:24:16 AM PDT by bamahead
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-36 last
To: null and void
...or they could just convert to OSX, like their customers. Might be their best move. Regardless, they are going to need to bite the bullet, undertake the ground-up OS redesign that Apple did for OS/X, and tell Grandma and the big corporations that their Windows 95-era apps just aren't going to work any more. ;)
21
posted on
07/31/2008 11:18:20 AM PDT
by
Mr. Jeeves
("One man's 'magic' is another man's engineering. 'Supernatural' is a null word." -- Robert Heinlein)
To: eCSMaster
Except for OS/2's single messaging queue that let one bad application lock up the system, just like DOS. ;)
OS/2 was exactly what you would expect a desktop OS designed by veteran IBM mainframe systems programmers to be - perfectly safe because it couldn't actually run any of those pesky and dangerous applications users needed to operate their businesses. Where it ran dedicated, limited apps like ATMs it was fairly successful - as a user desktop it was a disaster.
IBM made the opposite mistake from Microsoft - supporting nothing instead of supporting everything - and OS/2 crashed and burned a lot sooner because of it. Vista shows the folly of the opposite extreme, but Microsoft has made a whole lot of money in the interim.
22
posted on
07/31/2008 11:27:02 AM PDT
by
Mr. Jeeves
("One man's 'magic' is another man's engineering. 'Supernatural' is a null word." -- Robert Heinlein)
To: bamahead
Microsoft has gotten a serious beat down by Apple. Seems they are the last to know though. They need some innovative, new leadership. They have been on creative & innovative life support for well, well over a decade.
23
posted on
07/31/2008 11:51:30 AM PDT
by
GOP Poet
To: bamahead
The Midori documents foresee applications running across a multitude of topologies, ranging from client-server and multi-tier deployments to peer-to-peer at the edge, and in the cloud data center. Those topologies form a heterogeneous mesh where capabilities can exist at separate places.Jeez, is this the true article source? :)
24
posted on
07/31/2008 11:55:14 AM PDT
by
JoJo Gunn
(The McCainiac's creed: Death to America by a thousand cuts)
To: KosmicKitty
Actually, Midori can be quite tasty Yup:
25
posted on
07/31/2008 11:57:00 AM PDT
by
Grut
To: bamahead
Wonder if it will similar to LINUX - I will be converting all of my computers (current count is 6) to LINUX - much more friendly and cheaper to run (of course I used to be a UNIX admin)
26
posted on
07/31/2008 12:00:41 PM PDT
by
Core_Conservative
(Proud to be "The self-righteous, gun-totin, military lovin, abortion-hatin, gay-loathin'...")
To: Moose4
Translated into English, does that mean it wont be a bloated cow of an operating system like Vista?It means you'll never see it at home.
27
posted on
07/31/2008 12:02:46 PM PDT
by
VeniVidiVici
(Barack Hussein Obama=Jimmy Carter Part Douche)
To: Mr. K
if we could harness just a percentage of it in a networked environment it would be hugeAlready being done.
google Botnets
28
posted on
07/31/2008 12:42:41 PM PDT
by
zeugma
(Mark Steyn For Global Dictator!)
To: eCSMaster
For the serious multithreading, the best I’ve ever seen was BeOS. A dual-processor PowerPC with BeOS could play several videos, animations and music at the same time without a hiccup — in the mid 90s.
This goes a little further though, but then it is over 10 years later.
To: zeugma
To: Mr. Jeeves
31
posted on
07/31/2008 1:43:29 PM PDT
by
mr snerd
To: bamahead
32
posted on
07/31/2008 1:43:30 PM PDT
by
mr snerd
To: bamahead
One day, that probably will make it to the consumer level...sad to say. Then it will be like dealing with the cable company.Ughh...I'll never move beyond the rabbit ears of computing...
To: bamahead
Copland 2.0. Or is that Pink?
-ccm
34
posted on
07/31/2008 6:02:38 PM PDT
by
ccmay
(Too much Law; not enough Order.)
To: bamahead
Midori will be built with an asynchronous-only architecture that is built for task concurrency and parallel use of local and distributed resources, with a distributed component-based and data-driven application model, and dynamic management of power and other resources. I'm a professional geek working in a 100% Windows environement. I also spent twenty years in the US Navy. That sentence is the most impressive example of geek-speak nonsense I have ever had the pleasure to parse.
35
posted on
07/31/2008 6:07:09 PM PDT
by
j_tull
(Massachusetts, the Gay State. Once leader of the American Revolution, now leading its demise.)
To: bamahead
Midori means “green” in Japanese...
36
posted on
08/01/2008 7:39:54 PM PDT
by
Bikkuri
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-36 last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson