Posts Tagged ‘microsoft

25
May
11

Are Apple displacing Microsoft (as greedy inc.)

blemished apple

blemished apple

On Monday I received a new iPhone 4. A year or so ago I had bought a Macbook Pro and was impressed despite a handful of gripes. I’ve owned a Nokia N95 for a while and this is a good phone but I felt it was time to update. I read a few reviews and watched a few Youtube comparisons and all the modern smart phones seem very good. I did not want to spend my life comparing technical data and so, having a Macbook, the obvious choice was an iPhone 4. I thought this way I’d avoid any connectivity and interoperability issues……..

My initial impression on the iPhone was negative. After switching on it insisted on being connected to a Mac and immediately demanded my credit card details. Presumably in case I ever buy anything from iTunes. I have to say that I find this grossly invasive! I had not intended to buy anything much and I am one of the generation who grew up with vinyl and CDs and so my music consists of digitised albums, scanned CDs and downloads from Amazing Radio.

However, what’s done is done, so I synched the phone and started looking around. Weirdly the much vaunted iTunes is not the music player on the iPhone. Instead it seems to be a shop window for Apple to flog me stuff. One has to find the iPod icon to play the music which has been transferred from my macbook.

The iPhone 4 is, of course, a great phone and I am impressed but one glaring failure is that the phone will not sync with my macbook through blue tooth or Wifi. This is pathetic. Despite the Bluetooth interface on the macbook referring to smart phones when I try to pair my Apple iPhone 4 with my Apple Macbook Pro I am told that the macbook “is not supported”. What utter bollocks!

I now own a device with the specific purpose of mobile communication. It has three separate methods of wireless communications (3G, Wifi and Bluetooth). Yet the only way of synching it is to plug in a cable! Hello Apple, this is 2011 not 1995.

Further investigation revealed that a Wifi syncing app had been created but rejected by Apple and so could now only be used on Jailbroke iPhones.

I was also a bit miffed to discover that there is no obvious way of transferring general files from the Macbook to the iPhone. The iTunes application on the Mac allows transfer of music, movies, photos etc but not other files such as PDFs or Word processor docs and the iPhone storage does not appear in the Finder so you can’t simply drag and drop files across.

Another issue is the ring tones. On my Nokia I could select a track from my music collection as a ring tone or I could create a sound file myself. With the iPhone there are presets or you can “buy” a ringtone from iTunes. There’s that word again “buy”.

It’s odd that Apple users used to consider themselves as innovative free thinkers and contrasted themselves with the monolithic big business drones that used Microsoft. After a bit of hunting around in the Apple forums I found discussions going back to 2007 on Bluetooth synching including the arrogant posts by people who appeared to have no imagination and slavishly followed the Apple line even when this ran contrary to obvious user preferences. This used to be the territory of Microsoft not Apple.

The iPhone’s lack of basic functionality and the fact that Apple are so greedy that the very first thing that they need me to do is register my credit card details and then try to charge for piffling ring tones give me a very poor impression. It is interesting that Google Suggest reports the top three phrases starting with “Apple are” to be:

  • Apple are evil
  • Apple are greedy
  • Apple are greedy bastards

I have never been a great fan of Microsoft but feel that, perhaps now that Microsoft are starting to lose their grip, they may be becoming a bit more cooperative. Apple on the other hand appear to have caught the Microsoft disease and think they will rule the world.

Apple share price

Apple share price

The share price for Apple continues to rise but if one looks at the chart one sees a steep rise as Apple introduced music players, smart phones and tablets. But having established the market and set the bar the competition is now replicating their products and I suggest that when you reach the top there is only one way to go. I just wish I’d bought some Apple shares as now must be the time to sell.

Am I being over critical? I think not. I have not bought a product from some minority Korean company. I have bought a top of the range product from the acclaimed industry leader. A company that is now valued at more than Microsoft.

So, for the moment I have an Apple Macbook Pro and an Apple iPhone 4 and, with some reservations, I am generally satisfied with them.

But I am now aware that buying Apple does not mean easy interoperability or cutting edge functionality. With Windows 7, Microsoft appear to have refined the user interface and there are some very nice Android and Windows phones out there. When I come to replace my Apple kit I will be very wary of Apple. Perhaps Apple’s image of innovation is now no more than a useful brand image used by their marketing department to sell to people who are more interested in “style” than substance?

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10
Mar
11

The death of the OS

Why own a PC?

Why own a PC?

I attended an Oracle seminar on Cloud Computing last week at a hotel opposite St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. These events are a little grim as the marketing types have ensured that, once you enter the Oracle area, all sensory data received screams “Oracle are TRENDY” at you. From the colour scheme and the logos to the bloody awful music which appeared to have been selected by a teenager asked to play something he thought reminded him of computers.

Oracle’s main theme is that they are developing an overarching framework to provide cloud computing based around Exabyte and Exadata. They’re marketing can’t have been that good as I forget which is which but part of their offering is hardware tailored to virtualization and part is software tailored to provide systems which can be set up and taken down quickly.

Good, good, Excellent, excellent!

It got me thinking.

I suggest that server visualisation is the result of the failure of the Operating System (OS) to do its job. These days we tend to think of the OS as a fancy interface with windows which open and close and make nice noises. However, this is just a “shell”. It is the bit that talks to the user. The reason for an OS to exist is to abstract the hardware from the user and the applications. It is to allow developers to write in high level languages rather than machine code.

Another point of a modern OS is to provide interrupt driven slices of time to each application in a way that makes the application appear to be running continuously on a processor. Also to isolate each process so that if one fails it does not take down the rest.

All OS vendors spent a lot of time convincing us that they had achieved this. However, over the past ten years or so it has become common practice, especially with Windows systems, to place only one application on each system. The OS had failed to reliably isolate application and people did not trust Windows enough to allow two critical apps to share the same system. This led to a proliferation of underutilized servers.

Enter VMWare.

VMware, as we all know, allows many physical boxes to appear like one big box and for this big box to appear like many smaller boxes. The effect is that we can run numerous “virtual machines” on one big physical machine that is itself made up of numerous smaller physical machines. This is useful as it allows fault tolerance and the ability to add capacity easily. It also isolates each system from the other without the necessity to add hardware for each new system and allows better management of hardware resources. In short it is more efficient.

So, the band wagon had started rolling and on jumped everyone in sight creating their own systems for virtualization. Of course Oracle are up there with the best of them.  At least, they claim that they are, I should point out that many presentations at the Oracle minar included am early slide stating that some of the features shown were currently still under development. We need not worry, their tasks is really one of tidying up and bolting everything together.

So, where are we now or where will we be once Oracle’s vision materialises?

We will be in a world where resources such as storage and networking are managed, not by the OS but by the Database engine or the virtualization software. A world of centralised functionality such as single sign on and file sharing.

What then is the role of the OS?

It may be that the OS has no role on the server side at all. Oracle already have a version of their relational database which runs directly on their virutalization software. Further, with desktop virtualization and gadgets like the iPad infringing on the desktop/laptop space it may be that we’re in for a shake up there too.

If you have Microsoft shares, sell them.

10
Mar
11

Why own a PC or Mac?

Around 1995 PCs were hot and now they’re not. We still use PCs or Macs and we still rely on them but we have to start asking why? Most new shared applications are written with a web front end so we can access them with any gadget with a web browser. For example we could just use our mobile phones.
Though this is true we may still feel that we need the size of a laptop or desktop screen and keyboard and so feel forced to use both a smartphone and a PC.

This can’t last much longer. A bit of hunting around the web reveals that it is possible to connect a large screen and a full size keyboard to your iPhone. So why not just have a big screen and a keyboard on our desks and plug our iPhone in when we want to do some full size work? Why have even own a PC?

Microsoft must be very worried and perhaps their last chance is the recently announced tie up with Nokia. Even if this partnership is a success it’s doubtful that we will see a return to one OS dominating. Microsoft have had their day.

16
Sep
09

Is Microsoft Racist?

A couple of weeks ago the news media carried a story covering a Microsoft advertisement which was used in Poland. The image had originally been used in The United States and showed three office workers, one of them black. The Polish version of the image had a white guy’s face superimposed on the black man. The image editor appeared to have forgotten about his hands which were the original colour giving the game away.

Microsoft Ad

Microsoft Ad

Accusations of racism ensued and Poland was branded a racist nation. However, branding a whole nation racist is itself a racist generalisation so let’s just think this through.

Microsoft ran an advert in a country with a diverse, ethically mixed population and wanted to run the same advert in another country with a predominantly white population.

When faced with these sorts of issues it is useful to alter aspects of the scenario slightly to challenge assumptions and see how this changes our reaction. So let’s say that the company was Chinese and they were selling to Kenya. Let’s say that the original image had three Chinese people. Would it be racist to change the image to one showing predominantly black people?

What if the Chinese company wanted to use the image in The United States but the U.S. marketing guys complained that the people in the image were not sufficiently ethnically diverse. The Chinese might respond that one guy was a Wega, one a Han Chinese and the other a Tibetan. Who’s the racist? The Chinese for not including a black guy or the Americans for thinking that all Orientals look the same?

Could Microsoft have run the same image showing only one black guy in an advert used in Nigeria? If they had, might this not be construed as lazy neo-imperialism?

The real question is this: Is it racist for a company to adjust the ethnic mix of characters in advertising to suit the target country? In my view it is not, it happens all the time. Advertisers design images so that the target audience will empathise with the people in the commercials and for this they try to reflect the ethnic make up of each country.

Other times advertisers might also try to project an image that people aspire to and this can mean that the people portrayed are of a different group than the target audience. An example of this was Australian TV advertising in the 1970s where English accents were used because they were considered more up market.

Nationality, race and ethnicity are all exploited to produce an image that the seller believes is attractive to the target audience. We all have prejudices and advertising executives make conscious attempts to exploit our unconscious prejudices. We believe that German cars are superior so Citroen tell us that the new C5 is “’Unmistakably German”.

We believe that Scots are prudent and so banks use Scottish accent for their commercials and who would dream of selling spaghetti source without an outrageous Italian accent?

There is an enormous block of hypocrisy on all sides of the racism debate and too many people scream

Rivers and Howe

Rivers and Howe

racism as a cover for their own prejudice. This ranges from the supposedly anti-racists liberals treating Africans like children to the automatic condemnation of all things “little England”.
Darcus Howe fell into this trap during a BBC Radio 4 discussion with Joan Rivers in 2005. He casually slandered Ms. Rivers by saying that the word “black” offended her. This absurd insult was vehemently denied by Ms. Rivers but what was interesting about this episode was that she picked up on it at all. Racists insults such as these are often ignored and the accusation of racism sticks by default.

 

Too often accusations of racism against organisations are met by an attempt to distance the organisation from the supposed perpetrators. Presumably this is done because of the fear that the organisation will be branded as racist but this distancing means implicit acceptance of racism and only serves to reinforce the public perception that the incident itself was racist. In the case of Microsoft and the Polish advert this is by no means clear.

Racism has become a taboo in modern society which probably stems from the recognition of the evil of the African slave trade and The Holocaust. The feeble minded have picked up on the necessity to be anti-racists and interpreted this as a prejudice against white people and a knee jerk accusation of racism whenever they hear the word “black”.

I enjoy BBC, Radio 4 comedy but am often surprised at the vitriol of Jeremy Hardy and Markus Brigstock when they attack some poor soul who they have deemed a racist. These two admirable comedians fall into the same trap as the racists: The automatic and prejudice vilification of an individual because of an assumed membership of a hated group. The audience appears to laughs and claps energetically but this is not from mirth but a desperate attempt to distance themselves from the target of the abuse.

I am reminded of a sinister piece of video showing Sadam Hussein when president of Iraq. He sits smoking a cigar while casually ordering individuals to be taken away by security guards. The remaining individuals become frenetic in their efforts to show their allegiance to Sadam.

She’s a witch, he’s a communist, you’re a racists! We invent groups to exclude people more than we do to include them. In the Christian bible Mathew asks: “Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?”

The answer, of course, is to distract attention.

Irrespective of whether Poles as a group are racist or not the furore over the Microsoft advert is not evidence either way. It is business as usual in the advertising industry met by prejudiced people deflecting scrutiny of their own views by publicly accusing other.

As if the witch hunt of racism is not enough a new prejudice is evolving along with a new terminology of persecution. We are now called to hate all those who remain sceptical about climate change and so, as we drive our cars, we can assuage our guilt by hurling abuse at the Chelsea Tractors and the Gas Guzzlers.

Humans! – Hypocrites the lot of them.

19
Feb
09

Windows – Still crap after all these years

Microsoft Windows is still crap after all these years!

Remember when we used to use Windows 3.1? Remember how crap it was and how it couldn’t mutlitask? They said “Wait. We’re developing Windows New Technology. It will be great. It will multitask and it will keep applications apart so that if one crashes the others will carry one.”

Remember? So we waited, didn’t we. We stayed with Microsoft. We spurned IBMs OS2. We ignored Apple mac. We ignored the Comodore Amiga would is still the best multitasking system I know of. And Microsoft brought out Windows NT 3.5. It was a bit flaky but it was better than Windows 3.1. And they brought out Windows NT 4.0 and it looked pretty spiffy. We thought we were catching up with Apple mac. But it still froze when it had network issues. So we waited and we waited and we waited. And Apple rewrote their whole OS, taking a unix variant as the basics and retain the old API. And we continued to wait.

So here we are in 2009 with Windows XP.

I was working with computers when Bill Gates was in short trousers. My first OS was RSTS on a PDP11. That could multitask with 96K of RAM.

There is something very basic about computers. They consist of a few fundemental components:

· At least one processor
· Some Random Access Memory to hold what we’re working on
· Some long term storage, like a disk drive, to save everything and maybe do some swapping of RAM
· Peripherals. eg network cards etc.

It is the operating system’s job to sit between all this stuff and the user’s program and allocate time and resources to the program.

There can be only one reason that a properly functioning application should slow down or stop: A bottleneck. One of the components is overworked. Either the processor is being hogged or the RAM is full etc.

However. When we use a Microsoft operating system there is a second reason and that is that the operating system is poorly written. Even after maybe 20 years of writing operating systems Microsoft still cannot handle the basic task of supplying resources to user programs.

Here we have an example: I’m running a program which freezes. OK, maybe the program is poorly written. But it is only hogging one of the cores in my dual core machine. There is no shortage of RAM and the disk is not being thrashed. So why is the Windows shell incapable of refreshing my desktop? There can be only one answer: Because it was written by Microsoft.

 

Screen SHot

Screen Shot

 

Microsoft have held the computing industry back 20 years – Discuss




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