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Bill Gates assists in funding first aviation-themed public high school



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 12th 04, 09:49 PM
Andrew Gideon
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Paul Tomblin wrote:

And stop people who subcribe to my
mailing lists from using Outlook and Outlook Express, so they don't flood
my mail servers with the viruses which they inevitably get because of it.


Stop people that happen to visit a web site or view a mail message with my
email address from using MSFT products. That would prevent those products
from sending out viruses forged to appear to be from me.

- Andrew

  #2  
Old February 12th 04, 10:09 PM
ET
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Andrew Gideon wrote in
online.com:

Paul Tomblin wrote:

And stop people who subcribe to my
mailing lists from using Outlook and Outlook Express, so they don't
flood my mail servers with the viruses which they inevitably get
because of it.


Stop people that happen to visit a web site or view a mail message
with my email address from using MSFT products. That would prevent
those products from sending out viruses forged to appear to be from
me.

- Andrew



Of course we all know that if, say Netscape was used by 90%+ of all the
users out there, all the security explotes/viruses etc would be written for
those applications....

--
ET


"A common mistake people make when trying to design something
completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete
fools."---- Douglas Adams
  #3  
Old February 12th 04, 10:21 PM
Andrew Gideon
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ET wrote:

Of course we all know that if, say Netscape was used by 90%+ of all the
users out there, all the security explotes/viruses etc would be written
for those applications....


Presuming that Netscape (or whomever) didn't break some basic principles of
software engineering (ie. shoving a widely diverse set of features into a
single monolithic component), it's a good bet that there'd be fewer bugs
and that those would be more quickly fixed.

~200 days for the fix for the ASN.1 issue? That may be a new record.

Presuming that Netscape (or whomever) didn't bundle their product with the
monopolistic OS in a way that eliminates competition, along with contracts
that discouraged OEMs from using alternative OSes, then it wouldn't be
likely that any single product would achieve 90% reach anyway.

Monocultures are good for disease, but bad for the population.

- Andrew

  #4  
Old February 13th 04, 01:36 AM
Bob Noel
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In article ne.com,
Andrew Gideon wrote:

ET wrote:

Of course we all know that if, say Netscape was used by 90%+ of all the
users out there, all the security explotes/viruses etc would be written
for those applications....


Presuming that Netscape (or whomever) didn't break some basic principles
of
software engineering (ie. shoving a widely diverse set of features into a
single monolithic component), it's a good bet that there'd be fewer bugs
and that those would be more quickly fixed.

~200 days for the fix for the ASN.1 issue? That may be a new record.


didn't you hear? ms claims the bug isn't the problem, the
patch is the problem.

--
Bob Noel
  #5  
Old February 16th 04, 12:16 AM
CriticalMass
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Andrew Gideon wrote:

Presuming that Netscape (or whomever) didn't bundle their product with the
monopolistic OS in a way that eliminates competition, along with contracts
that discouraged OEMs from using alternative OSes, then it wouldn't be
likely that any single product would achieve 90% reach anyway.



See, this kind of crap is what passes for "information".

OK. So you have an opinion about MS. Wonderful. An opinion is like an
asshole. We've all got 'em. But that doesn't make you special.

MS "bundles their product with the monopolistic OS"? Bull****. If
there's any obstacle out there preventing ANYONE from doing precisely
what Bill Gates has accomplished, providing THE WORLD with a PC-based
operating system THAT WORKS better than anything else out there (you
wanna' challenge the consumer usage numbers?), state what that obstacle
is NOW, before any more of your baseless charges that MS is
monopolistic. It's not a "monopoly" - he built a better mousetrap-
what's your problem with that? We can do that in this country - it's
fair, and it's legal. Get over it.

I prefer Netscape as a browser, and NOTHING in the Windows operating
system does any "eliminating", or in any other way, precludes my use of
a non-MS product.

C'mon. Get a life.

You gotta' problem with Microsoft? Fine. That's your privilege. But
lose all the diatribe about how Gates and MS are getting in your way of
doing what you want. It ain't happening. You're hallucinating.

  #6  
Old February 16th 04, 01:48 AM
Andrew Gideon
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CriticalMass wrote:


MS "bundles their product with the monopolistic OS"? Bull****.


You write like this, and accuse others of misinformation or hallucination?
Or do you claim to know better than US Federal and EU governments?

If
there's any obstacle out there preventing ANYONE from doing precisely
what Bill Gates has accomplished, providing THE WORLD with a PC-based
operating system THAT WORKS better than anything else out there (you
wanna' challenge the consumer usage numbers?), state what that obstacle
is NOW, before any more of your baseless charges that MS is
monopolistic. It's not a "monopoly" - he built a better mousetrap-
what's your problem with that? We can do that in this country - it's
fair, and it's legal. Get over it.


Oh, please. You don't know how IBM handed MSFT a monopoly? Where've you
been?

Anyway, even if you were correct in your assertion that MSFT achieved its
monopoly through reasonable and legal means, that does nothing about the
assertion that they've abused said monopoly.

Or does this distinction still escape you?

- Andrew

  #7  
Old February 22nd 04, 12:37 AM
CriticalMass
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Andrew Gideon wrote:

Anyway, even if you were correct in your assertion that MSFT achieved its
monopoly through reasonable and legal means, that does nothing about the
assertion that they've abused said monopoly.

Or does this distinction still escape you?



It does.

By what means did MS achieve "its monopoly"? Maybe, by making software
everyone chose to use? H'mmmm. Maybe, we're on to something here.

The argument that "no one had any other choice", which you and others
apparently try to make, is intellectually vacant, given that there were
never any market forces preventing potential competitors from entering
the fray and providing competing OSes.

C'mon. Where does this bashing "the ones that make it" ever end? Gates
built a better mousetrap. Get over it. You don't want to use it?
That's fine with me. Load up Linux or something equally as goofy, and
see what software apps there are out there you can run. It's your
choice, big guy. Just don't try to argue that MS is junk simply because
it's the biggest dog on the block. That's not a defensible position.

In my view, MS has done nothing but what any other creative company in
similar circumstances would do - innovate.

  #8  
Old February 22nd 04, 01:35 AM
Paul Tomblin
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In a previous article, CriticalMass said:
By what means did MS achieve "its monopoly"? Maybe, by making software
everyone chose to use? H'mmmm. Maybe, we're on to something here.


Or maybe by going to every major computer maker in the world and telling
them "If you sell even ONE computer without Windows on it, we're going to
quintuple the price you pay on the ones that do have Windows on it". And
thus, they went from having a large market share to gaining a monopoly by
illegal means.

You don't believe me, read the transcripts from the anti-trust trial.

--
Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/
Considering the number of wheels Microsoft has found reason to invent,
one never ceases to be baffled by the minuscule number whose shape even
vaguely resembles a circle. -- [unknown]
  #9  
Old February 22nd 04, 04:14 AM
Andrew Gideon
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CriticalMass wrote:

Andrew Gideon wrote:

Anyway, even if you were correct in your assertion that MSFT achieved its
monopoly through reasonable and legal means, that does nothing about the
assertion that they've abused said monopoly.

Or does this distinction still escape you?



It does.


That's a shame. As you'd know if you actually followed any of this, how a
monopoly was achieved has nothing to do with whether or not it is abused
after having been achieved. That is, there's nothing wrong with acquiring
a monopoly (assuming nothing illegal was done en route). But *abusing* it
is a crime.

By what means did MS achieve "its monopoly"? Maybe, by making software
everyone chose to use? H'mmmm. Maybe, we're on to something here.


You really do need to look further into this if you're going to be making
statements like this in public. It'll save you some embarassment.

There are several ways that the monopoly was achieved. My opinion is that
the most important was the first step: that IBM - having its own DOJ
problems around the same time - effectively endorsed the MSFT product while
leaving it free to compete with IBM. The endorsement from IBM - "nobody
gets fired for buying IBM", I hope you recall - went a long way towards
acceptance in the business community.

Once the relationship with IBM was established, but after the clones started
coming out, MSFT negotiated deals with the vendors that precluded their use
of any other OS (in actuality or effectively through pricing). Any company
wanting to compete with IBM in the PC market had to agree to this contract.

The vendors also had to pay for the MSFT license even if a machine was sold
w/o. Thus, there was no incentive even to sell a "naked" machine.

Most people discuss this issue, as it is illegal behavior for a monopoly
(but not for a company not a monopoly, note {8^). They discuss it because
it is what became the crime.

But I still find the original granting of the monopoly by IBM more
fascinating. I cannot imagine why IBM would make that type of
mistake...and so I wonder if this was a result of the DOJ's case against
IBM for abuse of monopoly. Was this some legal tactic on IBM's part?

The argument that "no one had any other choice", which you and others
apparently try to make, is intellectually vacant, given that there were
never any market forces preventing potential competitors from entering
the fray and providing competing OSes.


It was all about being compatible with IBM...which did preclude any choice
other than MSFT.


C'mon. Where does this bashing "the ones that make it" ever end? Gates
built a better mousetrap.


"Built"? You don't even know the genesis of PC-DOS?

Get over it. You don't want to use it?
That's fine with me. Load up Linux or something equally as goofy, and
see what software apps there are out there you can run. It's your
choice, big guy. Just don't try to argue that MS is junk simply because
it's the biggest dog on the block. That's not a defensible position.


That's absolutely true. A monopolistic product could still be a quality
product. Any arguments that the MSFT product is poor must be made on
grounds like the lack of security, the insufficient memory protection, the
bloated kernel, etc.

In my view, MS has done nothing but what any other creative company in
similar circumstances would do - innovate.


My cat thinks I'm God. She's about as correct as you, for the same reasons:
insufficient information for intelligent analysis.

What innovation? The GUI comes from Xerox, the kernel didn't have 1970s
technology for safe multiprocessing until the 1990s, it's a step backwards
in engineering to bundle the UI and the kernel, ... so what innovation?

The only innovations I've seen have been on the business side...and these
have tended to end up in court.

Enron was innovative too, I suppose?

- Andrew

  #10  
Old February 16th 04, 03:25 AM
Teacherjh
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If there's any obstacle out there preventing ANYONE from doing precisely
what Bill Gates has accomplished, providing THE WORLD with a PC-based
operating system THAT WORKS better than anything else out there (you
wanna' challenge the consumer usage numbers?), state what that obstacle
is NOW


Standards.

This isn't a computer newsgroup, so I'll stop at pointing out:

1: Several OSs work better than Windows. Windows is just sort-of adequate.
Adequate is good enough for Americans.
2: Consumer "acceptance" has squat to do with quality. It has to do with
marketing and compatitiblity.

Why are they still making VOR airways? Why are they still using NDB
approaches? Why can I file GPS direct but always get rounted from here to
Kingdom Come? By now we should be free of airways and such... but we're not.

Why? Well, several reasons, but one big one is standards. The new stuff HAS
TO work with the existing system. You can invent any newfangled thing you
want, but it will never get adopted in this airspace if it can't coexist.

That's why Mac can read Windows disks. But like VORs, Windows doesn't have to
read Mac disks.

Jose





--
(for Email, make the obvious changes in my address)
 




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