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March 9, 2005 4:30 PM PST

Newsmaker: A Gates reality check

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Gates taking a seat in your den

January 5, 2005

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With Microsoft Business Solutions, you are making a big bet that in the midmarket, companies will want different things than they do today. How long do you think it will be before that pays off?
Gates: It's a great space for us in terms of the growth opportunity. You know, we are patient people. Everything we get into--even the Office software--took us a long, long time. We introduced a word processor that was not the No. 1 processor for about five years.

For the Macintosh first, if I recall.
Gates: We had a DOS word processor that was not a leading product. Mac Word was leading on the Mac. We didn't overpass WordPerfect on the PC for a long time after we'd become No. 1 on the Mac and a long time after we'd gotten into the word processing space.

There's not, like, some year we have in mind where things just explode. Every year we get more partners, every year we show the technical road map of what's common between the products and how it exploits the platform and Office in a better way.

Where should things be in the next couple of years?
Gates: Within the next--well, these releases are all pretty much in the next year--the idea of what we are doing with portal, business intelligence, roles and Web services, all that should become very, very clear. Some of the other stuff where we actually enhance the platform in some pretty deep ways...that takes several years after that before we get around to it.

With installed bases growing and testing taking longer, is it harder to do these big upgrades?
Gates: You have to be very agile in improving the software. If you look at the number of neat new things in Great Plains, Navision and Axapta...it is way faster than it's ever been. We've brought methodology to it. We are sharing across the three products. We are actually working at a level of the product where it is very easy to innovate. You are not changing the things that are harder to change.

Salesforce.com, which addresses a similar market, has been one of the more successful companies to come at it from the "software as a service" approach. Doug Burgum (a senior vice president at Microsoft) said earlier this week that Microsoft can solve that question of "How do you deliver software as a service?" Where are you with that?
Gates: Software as a service was a theme of a company meeting nine or 10 years ago where we heralded the idea that packaged software was done and now it was just all going to be shipped over the Internet. In fact, like many things around the Internet that were predicted to happen quickly, they are simply things that take more time.

Do you think it's still a couple of years before a lot of Microsoft products are offered in a hosted way?

You know, we are patient people. Everything we get into--even the Office software--took us a long, long time.
Gates: We actually have people offering Microsoft CRM (customer relationship management) in a hosted way. There are things we can do to make it even stronger in a hosted environment. We are doing those things. There are a lot of customers who still want on-premise. In terms of on-premise, we're growing faster than anybody and doing quite well. Clearly, we want to accommodate both models and give people even the flexibility if they want to switch from one approach to the other approach. We'll have more to say about that.

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Software NEEDS to be paid for?
by March 9, 2005 8:41 PM PST
We're in a time of knowledge and information, who says software ALWAYS needs to be paid for?
Students are designing their own processors, compilers, databases, and operating systems everyday in colleges all across the world.
It's inevitable that we have a science book called linux. That's the heart of Open Source.
Is it that hard to understand programming in terms of volunteer work??
M$ needs an attitude adjustment. That's their problem. that and their software is garbage.
Ever heard of an antivirus program taking over other OS's like OSX or linux?? I wonder why that is. :)
Reply to this comment
Yeah, I do wonder why
by BazNZ March 9, 2005 10:04 PM PST
Yeah actually, I do wonder why. I don't actually get it. I dabble in what I guess you'd call high-level programming, so I barely scratch the surface. I know that there's the argument about Microsoft software being more persuasive, but then to a cracker, I would have though "breaking" a Linux system would have been more of an ego boost, if it's that hard to do. And I know they hire good people. I also would have thought that their team environment would be tighter, too. I can understand it maybe ten years ago. When I first started at a company, in 1994, where everyone one had a computer, they didn't have a firewall or virus software. It was only starting to become an issue. I guess part of the compromises can be attributed to that, the fact that everyone is more connected, which seems be how these breaches spread and the fact that their software is often feature-rich (more doors to smash open), but other than that, I'm kind of at a lose. I happen to like Microsoft's software and don't go in for that WinTel Vs Mac, Google Vs Yahoo! crap. You use what works for you, but when there is compromise after compromise, it does tend to leave me a little disillusioned. Disappointed, too.
Who said that?
by David Arbogast March 10, 2005 12:11 PM PST
<<who says software ALWAYS needs to be paid for?>>

Nobody. But more to the point, not Bill Gates anywhere in this interview.

But if the software you want is not available for free, using it without paying for it is theft. Plain and simple stealing.
View all 2 replies
Software is business
by paulej March 10, 2005 2:30 PM PST
Software is the product of hard work and, as such, has value. If a company or group of people choose to write software and give it away for free, that's OK. I enjoy using Linux, too.

However, if we took this approach in every kind of business, the economy would go down the toilet. The world cannot run on "free".

The cost of developing software is very high and the people who do it for a living deserve to be well compensated for their effort.

You suggest that Microsoft's products are garbage, but I take exception to the claim. They have been the target of a lot of attacks due to popularity, but by and large, Microsoft's products perform as well or better than competitors and most certainly any open source products.

Linux is most certainly not impervious to attacks-- in fact, they are attacked (successfully) every day. The reason Windows gets the spotlight is because that is the OS used by most people and where it has the biggest impact on business when a worm, virus, or other such software is introduced.

I'd strongly suggest that you consider an attitude adjustment, otherwise you should consider a life of bartering chickens, growing your own food, and making your own clothes.
View all 4 replies
Science books are open source?
by March 12, 2005 12:42 PM PST
i wonder where you get that idea? as far as i know someone has to pay for them. they cost the schools money and in turn cost me money in tuition, librarys have to pay for books which in turn is passed to the consumer or the tax payers.
View reply
Software NEEDS to be paid for?
by March 12, 2005 6:15 PM PST
i guess it depends on the software. if it was sold or made for profit then yes it needs to be paid for. to do otherwise is theft. if it's opensource i guess it would depend on if you wish company level support for your product or not.
inovation is a great thing! many of the students you speak of will go on to write software that will earn them lots of cash (which in the end is why many of us go to school, to learn skills to profit from) oh and Linux is not the heart of opensource UNIX is for the most part. Bell Labs distributed the source code for UNIX for free to others long ago, several versions of UNIX sprang from that as well as Linux.
to say MS software is junk is a little extreme they have been around for a long time and have earned there place in history (not bad going from a Harvard drop out to one of the richest men in the world!) and as for the AV program taking over the OS, what AV are you speaking of and why blame MS for something the AV manufacturer did (by the way did it cross your mind that it might have been developed that way to enhance the function of the AV and OS?) can't say i've seen anything but viruses or maleware mess up a Linux machine or a Mac. although sometimes i've seen Linux trash a system or two on it's own if it isn't set up just right. keep in mind the average computer user doesn't have the time or understanding that many of us have. comand line OS's are a pain to most people (not saying they are not good! just complicated for the average person) as for Mac's why buy a system that you can only get replacement parts and software from one source? i like to mix and test out new things with my system (Athlon 3500+ running winxp pro, winxp pro 64 bit, and RedHat Fedora core3 x86_64) with a Mac i can't go to my local PC parts supplier and grab a NVidia 6800 video card and just pop it in, i have to buy it from Mac.(if it's availible and at a much higher cost i might add). something else to keep in mind is that MS products are used by many more people and business world wide (i know! you don't want to hear that!) so they are going to be a bigger target for most crackers just because the products are much more common in many workplaces and homes so it makes sense for the "bad guys" to look where the best chances to get the most access are. a true hacker on the other hand might spend the time it takes to hack you UNIX machine just to say he did it. (there is a difference between a hacker and a cracker. crackers are the scum of the earth to most people.)
i guess in the end you might want to lighten up a bit. instead of complaining about MS and it's flaws why not put your expertice to work and beta test some stuff to help make it better? funny thing is that is how most problems get solved with any piece of software or hardware!!
have a great day!!
View all 2 replies
Buisness Solutions Department
by dennisbaker2003 March 10, 2005 8:42 AM PST
Mr Gates
You need a big name created with your solutions program to market from.

Heres my reality check:

We are in a situation where I believe I have shown that :
1) the planet will shift its rotation to achieve a new position of
dynamic balance when the Polar Ice Caps melt.
2) the Shift in rotation will include gravitational fluctions that way
well leed to the extinction of humans.
3) Human Excrement + Nuclear waste = Hydrogen is a viable exportable
technology that may well be the only option to prevent #1 and #2.


So lets get a representative of your end, meet with me and see if we
can not do what is in the interest of all humans.

Dennis Baker
Reply to this comment
Please, "incent" is not a word
by March 10, 2005 9:45 AM PST
"...We are not going to incent the sales force in some way that would be a big problem for them..."

Please, "incent" is not a word, neither is "incentivize". Do a Google search on "define:incent". Just because Dick Gephardt and Bill Gates use it, does not make it a word, admittedly it is creeping into everyone's vocabulary. Can't we just say "motivate"?
Reply to this comment
Yes "incent" is a word
by Davross March 10, 2005 9:58 AM PST
I guess if you don't find something in Google it doesn't exist? Information can be found elsewhere, for instance... http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=incent

Let's not limit ourselves to Google as the end all be all for everything.
View all 2 replies
And leverage is not a verb...
by yobtvoya March 10, 2005 9:58 AM PST
"Leverage" is a noun, yet many Americans use it as a verb. It's even listed as a verb in some online dictionaries (although the Compact Oxford English dictionary lists it only as a noun). In traditional English, the correct usage would be "to provide leverage", instead of "to leverage".

I think that, to many Americans, English is more of a tool to massage to fit your needs than it is a standard to follow closely. That's why we see lots of "verbing the noun" going on, like "incentivize". Don't be surprised to see it in an online dictionary someday soon. I'm not defending the practice, just pointing out the reality (or should I say, realitizing).
View all 3 replies
incent is a new English word
by Stomfi March 10, 2005 3:30 PM PST
Just like fabulous means from a fairy tale, or chaos means the universes raw material having equal parts of order and disorder, so the new americans add more meaning to English, that wonderfully extensible language, thats made up from so many others, adding new words by the day.
Maybe I could use "extens" instead of extends, or "gated" instead of insecure.
Its sic ain't it.
View reply
Please, "incent" is not a word
by March 12, 2005 1:33 PM PST
funny thing about the english language, new words are created every day. do a google searh for "slang" and see for yourself.
Proprietary vs. True Science
by March 10, 2005 12:16 PM PST
If M$ would put more of its money into complying with science instead of trying to make its own proprietary system, maybe they'd be in a better place than they are now.
Examples: ActiveX, .NET, NetBIOS, etc.
You can't forget that they broke Java with XP.
They should rebuild their OS with C instead of C++ and Java. Or wait, UNIX already did that. If you're going to invent your own protocol or design language, at least make it secure. M$ has been digging its own grave since NetBIOS.
Reply to this comment
Proprietary vs. True Science
by March 12, 2005 3:48 PM PST
in case you had not noticed MS is in the busness to make money stop compairing apples with oranges and let it go alright?
View reply
MicroSoft's plans
by March 10, 2005 1:51 PM PST
Are WAY behind the rest of the industry. Linux (aka rip-off of unix) is gaining a lot of ground through government facilities, small businesses, and the only thing Linux is really useful for-the server market.

OS X is an OS of the Gods. The next release (10.4) is going to be phenominal and I can guarantee Apple's next move in software will be a push on the business side. Why not? Microsoft is already failing at its own promises.

Hell, there must be THOUSANDS of full-featured apps for the OS X platfrom that ARE free, I went to ZDNET and couldn't find a SINGLE ONE for XP to enhance Net Send. Ol' Bill and his programming cohorts need to start developing free stuff, methinks.
Reply to this comment
Hmmm
by David Arbogast March 11, 2005 11:35 AM PST
<<Ol' Bill and his programming cohorts need to start developing free stuff, methinks. >>

When Microsoft released IE for free, it completely dominated the market and pushed other companies out of business. Do you REALLY want Microsoft to release more software for free? How will that help OpenSource? How will that help Microsoft? How will that help developers? How will that help the economy?
View reply
M$ has always missed target dates.
by March 11, 2005 6:23 PM PST
They have never delivered a product on schedule.
Ignorant comment
by ajaikarran March 11, 2005 7:25 AM PST
I'm a Microsoft fan! To say that Windows or Office is junt is plain ignorant! Wordperfect did not innovate. They were complacent and satisfied with their market dominace. Microsoft has continued to innovate and offer high quality user friendly products. Why are there so many security issues? Simple, when you are number one people will be gunning for you. If linux becomes number one how long would it be before virues pop out of nowhere?
Reply to this comment
Aack!
by March 11, 2005 1:56 PM PST
But, AJ.. it's more than just that. There's fundamental design
issues with the Windows platform that are plainly just not there
on a Unix-type system that help viruses spawn. Clear
separation of admin (root) and non-admin. Clear and simple
system design (everything is a file). Less is more approach. Ask
most non-savvy computer users whether they'd enjoy stylish
computers with whiz-bang features or a bare basic one that
simply keeps their private data is secure, and I'm sure they'd
take the latter.

You can argue that being #1 is the reason Window is such a
target--that may be true. But with that popularity comes
responsiblity to "do the right thing", and that means profits
come second and your customer's safety and security come first.
Additionally...
by March 11, 2005 2:01 PM PST
I disagree wholly with Microsoft creating "user-friendly"
products.. I truly believe that the Windows interface is an
abomination. Cluttered, offensive colors, text that doesn't scale
proper, poor file system management, horrid searching
capacities....I could go on and on.

Apple is probably "gets it" the most: it's the interface, dummy!
But no computer today is "user friendly", and unfortuantely both
Apple...and moreso Microsoft are draggin their feet.
Your really have no clue.
by March 11, 2005 6:20 PM PST
WordPerfect did and still does innovate, but M$ got PC manufacturers to pre-load Office. Buy the way, there is a free office suite available, it's known as OpenOffice. It runs on many platforms. Go to openoffice.org and check it out.
View reply
"they're ignorant"
by March 13, 2005 2:30 PM PST
You're beginning to sound a lot like Michael Jackson.
Your argument is about as weak as a 12 yr old boy.
Wordperfect did not innovate
by John Kuzak June 1, 2007 6:08 PM PDT
http://www.analogstereo.com/alfa_romeo_145_owners_manual.htm
idiot
by ajaikarran March 11, 2005 7:29 AM PST
If Microsoft products are garbage it would not be number one. You are saying that people who buy Microsoft are dumb. Consumers are smart. If they don't like a product they will not buy it.
Reply to this comment
Say what?
by Jon N. March 11, 2005 8:28 AM PST
C'mon Aj, you know as well as I do, that it's not just that the software is "good". Its also about market share. If all my neighbors have a Windows machine, & run Windows software, my job has a Windows platform, & runs Word, then even though it might not be the best software on the market, I "have" to use it, because I "must" use this software to communicate with other systems. The problem now, is that M$ software is so universal & pervasive, that if you are even thinking about importing or exporting a document, its either Word (.doc) or PDF. It's sometimes about what is needed, NOT what's popular. If that were the case, OpenOffice would have a much greater share in the workplace. It's free, has a great translator, & is not a target of hackers...yet. I am impressed with the inroads that M$ has attempted in making their software more stable, but they will have a long, long way to go to get to the stability factor of either OS X or *nix systems. Just remember that Windows XP is going to go thru another major revision BEFORE Longhorn is released. Hummmmmmm...Isn't that special !
View reply
Say what?
by March 11, 2005 6:08 PM PST
Can you say pre-loaded agreements? That is why M$ is on top. Nothing they make qualifies as "best of" in any category. And by the way, consumers are stupid because they believe anything that BG says.
View reply
me the idiot?
by March 13, 2005 2:37 PM PST
where do i start? yes, most consumers are dumb when it comes to computer science. yourself included.
currently M$ is the MOST POPULAR, a term I haven't used since High School. It truly seems like popularity is M$'s true approach to innovation and marketing, which should mean that hopefully M$ is just a fad that will soon fade away.
If you're going to make analogies, don't do it based on popularity, it just makes you look stupid. But, don't worry, life without a start button isn't that scary.
point taken
by ajaikarran March 11, 2005 8:58 AM PST
However, you miss the point. Microsoft may have a "legit" monopoly but it does not sit on it's behind and enjoy the profits. They INNOVATE! Consumers have lost in ake of the goverment suit against Microsoft. I just an HP machine. Office 2003 came as a trial version. Wordperfect is offered for free. I have to pay fot Office. When I bought a Dell 5 years ago offcie was bundled and no additonal cost. INTEROPERABIITYis the key to OpenOffice. It is compatible w/Office. However, consumers overall find Microsoft products better. Windows updates...or course yoi have to release updates now and them. Revamping XP into longhorn is needed. Microsoft is not perfect. Hackers have proven that. MORE IMPORTANTLY why are we not blaming hackers for our Windows woes...they commit criminal acts. No one should ever forget that!!!!!
Reply to this comment
How about this...
by Steven N March 11, 2005 9:26 AM PST
Yesterday my sister-in-law calls me, she has a worm problem on her PC. A MS Messenger worm to be more precise. I told her half a year ago not to use it because of M$ poor security record.
Her answer: "...but everyone uses it..."

It's junk, plain and simle.

We'll see in a few years when Linux has a good consumer desktop offering.
View all 2 replies
better products?
by feranick March 11, 2005 3:54 PM PST
quoting:
"consumers overall find Microsoft products better"

You are kidding right? People don't use MS products because they are better, just because they are the standard, if they want to communicate with others. Thant is why Mac users needs to use MS Office for mac. If they could chose they would use anything else. MS are just not better. Some products are nice, but not better. For my part i haven't seen a product buggier than MS Office 2003. It crashes every single day. I am forced to use it. So much for ""better"" products...
View reply
Are you a complete idiot?
by March 11, 2005 6:11 PM PST
Do you work for, or have stock in M$. Your comments are totally out there. M$ doesn't innovate, they purchase other companies to eliminate the competition. They stole the whole Windoze scheme from Apple!
View reply
wow
by March 13, 2005 2:41 PM PST
this guy sure knows how to ramble without any good point. I will agree with him that Windows is not perfect, actually I couldn't agree more.
point mistaken
by March 14, 2005 11:38 AM PST
I really have to disagree with you Aj. MIcrosoft only innovations are in the realm of legal chicanery. Is it an innovation that MS Office is preloaded on your computer? Is it really an innovation that a major patch to fix problems that Microsoft denies the existence of actually renders about a fourth of the XP platforms unusable?
Don't blame the hackers, blame the crackers, crashers and script-kiddies. Blame Microsoft also.
If the bank employees leave the vault standing wide open, the front door propped open and and all go home for a long weekend, they should not be too surprised if they return to find the vault cleaned out. And I guarantee they will be seriously looking for a new job.
I recently read a report that indicated there are over 300,000 malicious programs (virii, trojans, worms and the like) for Windows. The count for Macintosh OSes is somewhere in the vicinity of 200(with many being Word macro virii), and for Linux, the count is about 30.
There are several reasons for the difference in numbers. Microsoft often puts software on the market before it's ready. look around on any windows computer and check the dll references with quickview, and you will find numerous calls to test and debug versions of the libraries. These should not be in the final verion.. ever.
Then there is the security issue. Windows and dos date back to a time when the idea was "One user, One Computer", and no networking or centralized data. In fact, Microsoft's early TELCOM terminal program was broken by design to the point of not being able to tansfer binary data at all. (I am old enough to have actually used telcom. )
Unix, of which Linux is a blackbox clone, was developed along with and on top of TCPIP and ethernet networking. So network security was built into the infrastructure of unix. By default, in the case of windows and unix (or linux) the basic installation is not generally configured for security, but securing windows seems to be a lot more difficult, due largely to the fact that default user has full privileges in Windows and is effectively the administrator.
how 'bout this...
by ajaikarran March 11, 2005 9:40 AM PST
Blame the ciminals who created the virus!
Reply to this comment
hear hear!
by David Arbogast March 11, 2005 11:32 AM PST
The manufacturer of the lock on my door is not at fault when a criminal breaks in. No matter how shoddy it may be.
View reply
Which virus?
by March 11, 2005 6:13 PM PST
Windoze is a virus, and it is best to stay as far away from it as possible. Try something else, something that actually works, like an Apple or even Linux. Try writing about something you actually know.
View reply
Sounds good to me!
by Jon N. March 13, 2005 12:28 AM PST
I've been saying this all along, Aj. Yes, these are criminals. Yes, they are reaking havoc with the entire windows community (& sometimes Linux users, too). Well, now that Ms. Bono has pushed through legislation to punish those who send any type of malware, at $2000.00 fine for a first offense per item, maybe we'll have a small break from the attacks. I just don't see it, though. They have to catch the cyber-jackasses first. 9 out of 10 crackers & hackers don't get caught. Nice thought, though.
comparison...
by feranick March 11, 2005 4:02 PM PST
I am driving my new car out of the dealer. At the certain point a hole road destroy my suspension. A small stone crashes my windshield. Yes right I should blame the road administration! Oh wait, cars from different manifacturers work fine in the same road! It must be my car then. So the manifacturer is responsible for it, and the warranty should take care of it. Oh wait, I need to wait few months because the fixes for my suspensions are not ready yet. They will included in a future "service pack". In the meantime If I want to drive safely I need to go for "non-original" parts, or not drive at all.

This was the reason people bought Japanese cars. This is the reason people shouldn't buy MS products.

P.S. I wonder what Nader thinks about this issues
Reply to this comment
You make sense!
by March 11, 2005 6:15 PM PST
I couldn't agree with you more. That massively bloated piece of **** known as Windoze needs to be eliminated. And the sooner the better.
View reply
comparison...?
by March 12, 2005 5:37 PM PST
interesting... in reality the insurance company would say you were at fault for not looking where you were going on the suspension issue. as for the stone in the windshield you would also be at fault for following to close.
by the way many cars are subject to product recall almost daily most of those recalls do not happen untill after someone gets hurt.
as for waiting to get service packs would you rather have untested software right now or give them the chance to test it out first? MS and others are not god and cannot see every possible attack that they might come under so be realistic and give them a chance alright? they could say "hey your on your own untill someone out there fixes it" (like Unix and Linux) part of the cost you pay for software goes into researching and fixing problems that come up. as consumers demand more out of there computers OS's get more and more complicated therefore harder to keep secure. very inteligent people work to make the product the way many people want it and equally inteligent people work just as hard to mess things up. last time i checked no one was perfect so like i said in other posts if you don't like MS products use your freedom of choice and pick something else or maybe do something usefull like beta test software to help make it better? (hey!! there's an idea!!!)
Have a great day!
View reply
It's a free choice world...
by Earl Benser March 13, 2005 11:15 AM PST
A person's choice of an OS is their business. Maybe they think
the OS is truly great. maybe it just came on the computer they
bought. Maybe some friend talked them into it. Whatever. It is
the person's choice, and he is free to make whatever choice, for
what ever reasons, he wants. No one can legitimately onject to
that choice, no matter how stupid, or wrong, or misguided that
choice may seem to be.

And as many have said, for most people, the wrong choices will
eventually become apparent. Other's may never notice a wrong
choice - in which case, was that choice really wrong?
But, It Isn't a CHOICE if---
by Gayle-Edwards March 13, 2005 4:03 PM PST
Boy, some people really ARE, ...BLISSFULLY IGNORANT.

For those that really don't know any better... Microsoft has been REPEATEDLY FOUND GUILTY of ILLEGALLY-SUPPRESSING this so-called, "...free choice" (...in American State-Courts, ...in American Federal-Courts, ...and in numerous Foreign-Courts).

Microsoft has always done everything in their 'power' (legal, or NOT) to ELIMINATE such, alleged, 'CHOICES'. Towards this end, Microsoft has even gone so far as to publicly, FALSELY, claim that...

-selling a computer without an 'operating system' is "ILLEGAL",

-using a "non-Microsoft Operating System" is most "probably-ILLEGAL",

-replacing a "pre-installed Microsoft Operating System" is "ILLEGAL",

-and even that, ...simply 'communicating with a "Microsoft Operating System-component", without their [Microsoft's] permission, is "ILLEGAL".

Furthermore, Microsoft HAS flat out THREATENED 'computer manufacturers', 'government agencies', and even 'consumers', with numerous "...disincentives" (I.E. illegal PUNISHMENTS), if they "...choose" to produce/use non-Microsoft products.

And, this doesn't even begin to address Microsoft's repeatedly creating intentionally-exclusionary 'proprietary-standards' (and willfully "...polluting" established 'standards'), ...solely to FORCE the use of 'Microsoft-products'.

...In the military there is a saying... "They can't MAKE you do something. But, They can SURE MAKE you WISH you HAD".

Some CHOICE...
Reply to this comment
All too true...
by Earl Benser March 14, 2005 6:26 AM PST
... but as long as people act like they are too stupid to reject the
marketing BS that MS lives on, they deserve to have the very
worst. And peopl in general are that stupid about most of the
technology fields. So they believe self appointed experts, who all
too often attempt to redefine ethics to meet their needs.

And Ol' Bill's second skill was marketing.....
Free Software is an oxymoron
by davidj7738 March 13, 2005 6:19 PM PST
English is an evolving language and dictionaries only enter words when the word is used often enough to actually be defined. Did the word 'google' exist 10 years ago.. i.e. google n. internet search engine v. to seach the internet using a search engine preferably google.com's search engine.

Science is free.. balderdash.. tuition was only 1/3 of my total education budget.. 2/3's was for books! Which in most cases had to be purchased new from the bookstore (not used the previous semester) and the bookstore would not buy them back as not being used by the 'next' course.

Why unix/linux is more secure than windows. Simply because in windows most users run at the 'root' level of access.
Apple did not invent the gui.. sort of believe that the palo alto project (xerox) had a hand in there before Team Macintosh..

The best will rise to the surface.. not neccessarily true.. Beta vs VHS... MCI vs PCI.. OS/2 vs MS Windows..

A virus writer usually goes after the largest audience.. who would know if someone wrote a virus/worm that attacked only sparc workstations that ran a proprietary O/S.

Point of fact. ATM's are switching from OS/2 to Windows XP (going from a non supported software to a larger supported software base) and use a form of VPN to connect to the bank (maybe using the internet as a transport layer) vice a more expensive dedicated line.. banks have to look at the bottom line..

As far as the hosted software issue goes.. gadzooks, that reminds me of the old mainframe/dumb terminal days with a twist.

Software is one of the few items that can be purchased that you NEVER own. You only own a license to use said sofware depending upon the EULA (end user licensing agreement)

People can't see the trees because of the forest..

A computer is only a tool.. if it does what you want then it is good.. otherwise change it. But also remember another cliche 'a carpenter never blames his tools for a bad job!'
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Free Software is donated time
by March 13, 2005 9:26 PM PST
First of all, the books you speak of are *mostly* written by college professors, who simply explain pre-existing and open technology in there own words. You're paying for the "features" of the book, not the technology itself which is described. The best analogy to the situation, is obviously paying for feature-rich software. The idea of booting and commands and configuration files is obviously common and open technology.
Therefore, I think your analogy is inacurrate.
Also, you say you can't ever "own" the software if you didn't personally write it. This is wrong too, because you can download source code and do whatever you want with it within your own network. It's at the point that you make it available to the public in some form, free or not, that you have to deal with licenses.
Innovation DOES NOT always cost money.
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make it available to the public
by John Kuzak June 1, 2007 6:08 PM PDT
http://www.analogstereo.com/alfa_romeo_gt_owners_manual.htm
Free Linux with every Windows !
by March 13, 2005 10:45 PM PST
Torrents at http://home.btconnect.com/chrisandcarolyn/torrents/
do things like http://home.btconnect.com/chrisandcarolyn/suse-for-windows.png
or http://home.btconnect.com/chrisandcarolyn/knosci.png
or
http://home.btconnect.com/chrisandcarolyn/ubuntu-hoary/virtual-warty.png
. Some people have reasons other than 'sell the zeros and ones' for providing software; in my case it's 'teach my children' and 'be in a position to take responsibility for it'.
Make me some better ones, feed back, and I will thank you.
In the one corner, the kid with PlayStation, LookingGlass 3D, OpenOffice.org, and the idea that you should replicate your DNA whenever you choose. In the other, the grown-up with the worm, the virus, the lawyer, and the idea that the Penguin should go the way of the Dodo. The problem is, the kid can program computers, and the lawyer can't.
It's a bit one-sided :-)
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watch; anybody wanna buy a watch
by March 14, 2005 12:32 PM PST
Here Microsoft is: selling OSes and making a good penny at it.

Next we see them hawking everything from T-shirts to game systems to development platforms.

Enough already, get back to work on OSes.
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Why does MS complain about Linux...
by fmcgowan March 14, 2005 3:08 PM PST
when BG says "People used to buy TCP/IP stacks. People used to buy basic backup software. People used to buy fonts. At least nominally, people paid for browsers...When you come into the world of software you know that if you are up at a higher level and you have something superimportant, it's going to move down, down, down and eventually be part of every copy of the operating system if it is something superimportant."

The FOSS people can just reply "People *used* to by the OS; when you start at a very higher level, and you have something superimportant, it's going to move down, down, down and eventually become a no-charge utility..."
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Both sides are right !
by March 21, 2005 3:38 AM PST
Hey Guys,

I took the time to read most of the posts on this article and I am here to say your both right. Open source is a valuable resource with the main idea that the more programmers involved with perfecting source codes that better the end results, which is true. Microsoft is also a valuable resource to so many people but more focused on the user and application, keeping the code to be used exclusively by their programmers and that?s ok. The idea of hackable code can be debated from both sides of the fence till the cows come home

Now to the conversation on cracked versions of Microsoft software by end users, I read just the other day an article that went on to say that illegal copies of Microsoft XP are being installed on new computer systems imported from foreign countries. Most of our computer giants have exported our jobs of building their systems to achieve what they call their end result, that being $$$$. Maybe that end result isn?t what it seems?lol.

I think the bigger question with Microsoft asking what it feels is a fair price for its use of the software, is what can the end user afford? Corporate America has shipped the majority of the jobs out of the U.S. to countries where workers are paid wages that are a fraction of the price sought after here in the states.

The idea is to bring this product back into the states to make a profit with lower costs goods. Its actually boils down to common sense, if you take a worker that is employed, he or she will spend that money back into the economy buying goods. Now take that same worker that is now unemployed or working at a minimum wage now becomes faced with trying to just make ends meet, with little extra to buy any product.

OK Corporate America, I hate to be the gloom and doom person to tell you that you have basically taken a course of wiping out your market share of people having the ability to purchase your product here in the states. Even the ability to come up with new ideas (R&D) is being farmed out. Short term?money maker for you, long term? better look for market shares from other countries in order to continue operations.

End result is the average users including educational students are now faced with the dilemma of where to come up with the extra money to purchase the software. If we continue in this direction, I feel Open source will win out only because it?s affordable (free).
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