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Comments on: Mozilla, Gnome mull united front against Longhorn

Representatives from the open-source foundations meet to figure out a common plan of attack as Microsoft's tightly integrated Web and desktop technology looms.

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Web > Desktop fusion is only 1/2 the story
by April 28, 2004 5:48 AM PDT
I think that if this is being touted as a web to desktop fusion then the effect of Longhorn is really being missed. The other side is that the OS is going to have the power of an app server and database and document management embedded right in. This combined w/ the web/dekstop fusion really takes the OS to the next level of being a true platform for distributed applications far beyond what Java ever imagined. It is tremendous because the infrastructure needed to support these new distributed applications by a central entity should be cut b/c more and more of the processing will exist on the desktop/client where the cycles are basically "free" and "cheap". Right now all the cycles are being burned on the server side and this is very expensive. So once you combine a true distributed (AND RICH; lets not forget the Flash worries in Longhorn as well) application platform with a very robust app server engine you have quite a platform for the future of networked applications. -- dave
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MS has yet to deliver...
by bjbrock April 30, 2004 6:00 AM PDT
on any promise. SP2 has been pushed back. Longhorn is a name that will never have a finished product to go with. MS no longer cares about the consumer so the consumer is looking for alternatives. It appears MS is still refusing to do what consumers would like so expect sales to keep falling off and worse and worse products being released by MS. MS is living in a dream world which doesn't come close to the real world the rest of us live in. Who cares about longhorn when XP is still sucking $$$$ from the consumer. MS is on a downward spiral as their products become less and less productive investments.

Longhorn is a joke. MS will never be able to bring it to fruition! They will be trying to make XP merchantable for years to come as the real MS comes to light and Bill Gates learns how to bake and eat humble pie!

MS is gioving the open source world all the time it needs to position itself as the next OS of choice. And I'm in no way looking forward to learning another platform. However, if MS continues to ignore what the consumer is saying and continues its arrogant approach to business, as has so many consumers recently, it will be time to look for an alternative as well.
Deja vu
by May 1, 2004 8:40 PM PDT
So looks like we're going back to put emphasis on decentralized infrastructure then... we have had this before, it was centralized (mainframes/minis), then it was decentralized (PCs came), then it was centralized again (client/server).

The reason many institutions centralized their IT architecture was because they've found out that management-wise, decentralized architecture is a nightmare to deal with.

Centralized architecture require you to invest quite a lot up front, but this pays off very nicely in the long term; with stability, manageability, and scalability of the system.

If Longhorn is trying to bring back the decentralized architecture, I think Microsoft is in for the final shock.
My only problem with Microsoft is...
by April 28, 2004 10:30 AM PDT
Most of this stuff being talked about for long horn I fear is going to turn to be like some of the stuff Microsoft touted with Windows 3.1, Windows 95, etc. Things like Drag and Drop which aren't used any where near as much as they should and isn't even implemented as a standard feature from program to program. So, I find it hard to get excitted about these things that Microsoft says will change out life forever when in the end they are just gimicks that are counter intuitive. Maybe I wrong, only time will tell.

The three things that bother me most about Microsoft is that it takes them far too long to get major versions of Windows out. By the time Longhorn ships (which I doubt will be in 2006) Windows XP will be over 5 years old, if not older. This is just too long for users to wait for the next generation of OS. Most of will have bought and junked 3 or 4 computers during that time. Not to mention that the Macintosh will have had far more updates than Windows. I really think the problem is that Microsoft has let the major flaws in Windows linger so long that now they are having to fix things and improve things that should have been fix a decade ago. Things that Apple took care of long ago. I also thing Microsoft took far to long to dump DOS from Windows. In many ways Windows is still near a version 1 program. We shouldn't have all of these security holes and probably wouldn't if Microsoft had done the job right from the start.

The other thing that bothers and I am sure to some it is minor, but it isn't to me and that is Windows interface keeps getting more and more hideous. If the interface style of Office 2003 is any indication Longhorns interface is going to be the worst of all. I wish Microsoft could design an interface that was functional and attractive.

The last thing that bothers me is now thanks to all of the security problems with Windows we are having to wait longer than ever for Longhorn and now they are saying that when it finally does ship it isn't going to have all of the new features it should because they are too busy having to waste time fixing pot holes in the road that is Windows security. I don't know about anyone else, but this just isn't write. 6 or 7 years for a major update only to have turn out to be more like an .5 update than a full version update. And, I am sure we won't see a price cut because it is lacking some of the features promised either. Someone here is getting ripped off and I don't think it is Microsoft.

The one thing the PC needs is a second OS option and unfortunately at this time Linux isn't it.

Just my opinion.

Robert
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A call to Mr. Jobs...??
by Steven N April 29, 2004 2:57 AM PDT
This is where Apple and their OS X could jump in. Their OS is based on BSD, so I would think it wouldn't be such an effort to port it to the Intel platform (perhaps I am viewing this too simple).
They have the image of providing a sound OS, which is user friendly and has all the applications, even IE.
If Apple would make this move, I think they would really have the Windows killer.
I am very tempted to use their OS X, but I am hesitant because I need to buy new Apple hardware.
I'd rather buy a PC than a Apple, because I like to have flexibility to play with OSses
If this roadblock would drop away, I know I wouldn't hesitate one second to get my hands at OSX on Intel...
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You are assuming...
by bjbrock April 30, 2004 6:48 AM PDT
that everybody wants to upgrade every three years. This is ludicrous. 99% of the business world never uses the fluff MS adds and then calls a new OS. The consumer simply can't afford to play MS's game anymore. MS has offered NOTHING in improved productivity or efficient use of resources. Two things that are minimum requirement for investing in new products.

This is no longer about technology. It is all about economics and MS is not an economically sound investment at this time. And, just as one of their OS's becomes mature and stable and productive, Windows 2000, they pull it as a choice for the consumer and force a nightmare like XP down the consumer's throat. This is arrogance at it acme. And the consumer is showing all too clearly that arrogance is a liability and thus we see only 60% saturation with XP. Why not the usual 90%? Go take a course in economics and the answer is very clear and concise.

In the end, what Dollar Bill and his company thinks is "best for all," doesn't mean squat if the consumer is alienated. And right now, more and more are wanting to "phone home". When Bill bows to the consumer as the king, which the consumer is the undeniable king, then we will see the exodus from Windows stop. BUT NOT BEFORE!
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Longhorn I wonder how much of it will be vapor ware?
by Kilz April 28, 2004 7:51 PM PDT
All the things I have read and seen sound to good to be true. We all know that when something sounds to good to be true . Its probibly not good or true.
I bet it all goes up in a puff of smoke and we get XP bloated. Remember ME?
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Where's KDE ?
by May 1, 2004 8:30 PM PDT
Where's KDE in this ?

XUL is great (not ideal, but it's very nice), I've started some development work based on it. It makes me happy to think that my work would have better interface (than standard browser) in all platforms that's served by Mozilla.

And if Gnome started to integrate XUL on its desktop, I think that'd means replacing my KDE desktop with Gnome.
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KDE / Gnome have other integration possibilities
by June 19, 2004 4:13 PM PDT
Work is ongoing to share themes between Gnome and KDE, unify the event loop between the two toolkits, use common streaming architectures and hardware notifications; see http://www.freedesktop.org/ and elsewhere.

Mozilla on Linux uses the GTK toolkit so it makes sense for them to unify with Gnome. There is a project for Mozilla to use the KDE/Qt toolkit, http://www.mozilla.org/ports/qtmozilla/ , but it seems moribund.

> And if Gnome started to integrate XUL on its desktop, I think that'd means replacing my KDE desktop with Gnome.

I bet you'll always be able to intermix OpenOffice, KDE, Gnome, Java, and Mozilla applications, but it'll always be more seamless if they're from one family.

In theory if you specify a UI in XML like Mozilla's XUL, multiple toolkits could turn that description into their own style of presentation. But it's early days right now.
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