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To: babyface00
Thank you for your nice post.

However, you still did not answer the question of what else. The fact is, ALL things considered, MS is still a winner for most installations.

What I need is ... That is where an error usually occurs: you are but one market segement but project onto MS what product-development they should pursue. The decision amounts to a balance between effectiveness (satisfying YOUR demands better) and efficiency (the cost of achieving that goal). For you and me to jusdge whether MS has made a wise decision of providing an UNdifferentiated product, we must see the quantitative analysis of those issues. I am confident that you are not privy to this sensitive information, and neither am I.

In the absence of that info, you and I must suspend judgment --- if we are to remain intellectually honest.

a lean, stable and secure OS that is cost-effective,

Welcome to the club: for years I wanted in a desktop and a laptop a stable and FAST 2-d graphics card. But I am now in a minority: America now does more gaming than spreadsheet analysis or engineering graphics. With the exception of one manufacturere, they do not produce such any more: every one is loaded with 3-d enhancement.

That is another example of a particular demand remining unsatisfied. But I do trust that the entire industry is not wrong from the business prospecive: they figered out that it does not pay to satisfy my demand with a differentiated product. I am not satisfied but I know that the manufacturers are correct in their strategy.

Microsoft products are getting to be like a Lexus with a bad engine. Again, from your standpoint and mine. MS has one of the best marketing groups; nobody's perfect, but you can trust that they look at their data.

60 posted on 04/12/2004 10:23:55 AM PDT by TopQuark
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To: TopQuark
I'd like to spend some time on discussing alternatives in more detail, but I'm in the middle of a huge project right now and it wouldn't be fair to my employer and my deadline commitment to spend too much time on them right now. I'll try and hit the thread again next week.

My next project is installing a Linux server into an organization. It will likely be the first of several, although we do anticipate keeping some MS servers due to two key apps that require them. The rest of the machines will be fair game for Linux. The desktops are next, if the business needs justify it. From what I've seen of XP and Longhorn, Linux has a good chance of taking over a large segment of my desktops.
62 posted on 04/12/2004 12:08:55 PM PDT by babyface00
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