Readers talk browsers -- specifically, why Firefox trumps IE, and whether Netscape
died a natural death:
I don't know what you don't like about Firefox. I find it fast, intuitive,
extensible and easy to use. Granted, I've been in on this session since 1982;
I've seen EVERY version of IE. I've seen everything that IE can possibly do
and I am not happy with IE. I only use IE because of some Web sites, like
the educational system's Web site. Otherwise, I do everything else in Firefox.
If I had to choose just one feature of Firefox that I rely on most, it's
the infinite zoom feature.
-Ari
Netscape definetely died. Take a look at Firefox (well, it's free). It's
still gaining momentum over IE, and now Chrome is doing its part. If Netscape
would've offered a very compelling reason to stick with it, it would be alive.
But I'm sure it would be as freeware.
I think Microsoft did a good job (even tough, unconsciously) in making the
market for the Web browsers at no cost. I don't think paying for such a piece
of software would've improved the security and quality.
-Armando
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/17/20080 comments
New VMware CEO Paul Maritz stood in front of a crowd of (I'd have to guess)
thousands and, like Sarah Palin,
gave
the speech
of his life. What's the difference between a former VMware CEO
and a pitbull? Lipstick. And if you put lipstick on Hyper-V, it's still Hyper-V.
No, Maritz really didn't say any of those things. In fact, that's probably
the lamest joke I've ever penned (send barbs my way at [email protected]).
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/17/20080 comments
While Microsoft has a series of discrete tools for servers, PCs, applications
and management, VMware is now
talking
about
what it calls a Datacenter Operating System. If that wasn't bold enough,
this OS (well, it's not really an OS) handles computers, networks and storage
(not sure how Cisco and NetApp feel about all that).
Essentially, VMware wants you to build your own clouds. The cloud isn't just
Google et al., but the datacenter right down the hall. Under this plan, computing
becomes a utility -- carefully managed by VMware.
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/17/20080 comments
In a Q&A session, Maritz was asked about support for non-VMware hypervisors.
He said, "At this point in time, we don't support hypervisors other than
our own," adding that VMware isn't religious about hypervisors and it would
consider it if there was enough demand.
After private conversations, it's clear that the door is open for other hypervisors.
The trouble is in doing things like VMotion with Hyper-V et al. that are so
easily accomplished with ESX.
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/17/20080 comments
Sun may not get the same attention in the virtualization space as, say, a Microsoft
or a VMware, but like IBM on the mainframe, Sun is no stranger to virtualization.
Sneaking its message in just before VMworld, Sun announced that its new hypervisor,
xVM Server, and its management platform for virtualization, Ops Center 2.0,
are
both
now ready
.
Sun already added the Xen hypervisor to Solaris. xVM Server is actually the
exact opposite; it adds chunks of Solaris to Xen, which Sun claims makes the
hypervisor more secure and full-featured.
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/16/20080 comments
Redmond Report reader Michael P. (you know who you are) told me the
second
Seinfeld-Microsoft commercial
is out, and pointed me to the four-plus-minute
version online. After the first outing -- which most of you agree
is
horrible
-- I feared the worst.
In the second commercial, Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld move in with an average
American family so they can reconnect with normal people. I watched it and thought
it was OK. Then as I thought about it more and more, clever scenes came back
to me -- and I liked 'em. Fact is, I can actually imagine this as a sitcom.
And once again, Gates did a great job playing Gates.
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/16/20080 comments
I like things feisty. Lance Armstrong, Bill Parcells and Vince K. McMahon are
all well-known jerks, but I love 'em anyway. That self-centeredness, that will
to succeed, is what makes them great. Microsoft is that kind of company. On
the eve of VMworld (actually, the week before) Microsoft had a massive product
launch for Hyper-V where it lowered the price to...
free!
Today, on the morning of VMware CEO (and former Microsoft powerbroker) Paul
Maritz's keynote, Microsoft sent out an e-mail about a Q&A with Mike Neil
on virtualization. Minutes after reading this on my BlackBerry, an attractive
woman dressed in black slipped me a poker chip.
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/16/20080 comments
Based on the aforementioned Michael's reaction, the second Seinfeld-Gates commercial
is already
more
successful than the first
:
In case you haven't seen it yet, here
is the next installment. It's on YouTube. I was crying about 30 seconds in.
That grandmother is hilarious.
-Michael
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/16/20080 comments
Yesterday I got up early, kissed the family goodbye and made the monstrous
multi-stop airplane journey to Las Vegas. You might think the author of a prestigious
newsletter such as Redmond Report would travel in style, but like many of you
I'm purely a coach potato. Traveling in that crowed stockade they call a fuselage
makes me appreciate where I'm going.
And that is VMworld, where I was instantly joined by 10,000 to 14,000 other
virtualization freaks. Today and the rest of the week I'll give you hands-on
reports from the show, along with a smattering of what's going on in the rest
of the computing universe.
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/16/20080 comments
Chrome may be based on Mozilla, Safari and a huge dose of Google code, but at
least
one
chunk is pure Microsoft
. Chrome uses the Windows Template Library (WTL),
a technology for running small programs that Redmond donated to the open source
community, according to Microsoft's Scott Hanselman.
Chrome authors also reportedly "disassembled part of the Windows kernel"
in order to make the browser more secure under XP.
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/15/20080 comments
Ever since Netscape died (Did it die on its own or was it murder? Verdicts welcome
at
[email protected]
),
IE has been the standard in browsers. IE worked fine for me, but security worries
and the desire for something new led me to Firefox.
Unlike some, I don't find Firefox fun or particularly cool. It is, however,
very good -- and through add-ons, nicely extensible. Foxmarks is great for keeping
bookmarks, and the browser blocks ads awfully well (it does crash a lot, though;
should I blame XP or Mozilla?). But there's nothing truly killer about Firefox.
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Posted by Doug Barney on 09/15/20080 comments