“Windows 8 with its Metro interface was facing the same uncertainty that Vista faced right before it was released.”
--Christine Hall"The rest, of course, is history. Vista turned out to be an even bigger embarrassment to Microsoft than ME had been six years earlier. It wouldn’t run properly on anything but the latest NASCAR rated processors. It needed gazillabytes of RAM. Worse, a massive number of peripherals, from printers to scanners, were turned into toast because they couldn’t be installed due to a lack of drivers. Very quickly the Windows fanboys came to see that the new best-of-breed was basically a lame horse.
"Now, Microsoft is only a few months away from the official release of Windows 8. This time, all we hear from the Windows fans is that they don’t like it. They’re unsure of the Metro interface on the desktop and worry about the wisdom of offering the exact same OS to do duty on the desktop and on tablets. They’re wary, with many convinced they won’t like the new, improved and better than ever operating system. I don’t hear anybody at all anticipating this will be the Windows to beat all Windows, a trophy that still goes to XP. At this point, all I hear is some hopes from Ballmer and his friends that the new OS will keep them from entirely loosing in portable devices and whatever comes next in the new computing zeitgeist."
There are some further comments in her site and outside the site. She has clearly struck a nerve. It's usually proportional to the amount of pro-Microsoft trolling.
In other news, Microsoft is besieged by malware. It takes radical measures now: "Microsoft has revoked more than two dozen digital certificates used to prove its wares are genuine after discovering some of them could be subject to the same types of attacks orchestrated by the designers of the Flame espionage malware.
"Tuesday's revocation of 28 certificates is part of a much larger overhaul of Microsoft's cryptographic key management regimen that's designed to make it more resistant to abuse. The housecleaning follows last month's discovery that some of the company's trusted digital signatures were being abused to certify the validity of the Flame malware that has infected computers in Iran and other Middle Eastern Countries. By forging the cryptographic imprimatur used to certify the legitimacy of Windows updates, Flame was able to spread from one computer to another inside an infected network."
This is related to Stuxnet, based on some researchers. It's a Windows-specific problem, and that's all that matters. Incidentally, there is some story going around about alleged "malware" for Windows, Mac OS X or Linux. The Microsoft booster at IDG spins it as merely a Linux story, spinning it as dishonestly as he typically does (link omitted). All this security FUD serves a broader agenda, such as the political agenda of the US versus Iran. Moreover, based on a new conference, Microsoft runs another campaign to promote online censorship, using the "child porn" excuse. This is how Microsoft's poor security record ultimately leads to the erosion of human rights and civil liberties. For Microsoft, it is not even possible to implement GUI features without leaving massive holes. The outcome is severe: "Microsoft has advised Vista and Windows 7 users to put Gadgets and the Windows Sidebar to the sword, following the revelation of yet-to-be-detailed remote code execution vulnerabilities in the features."
Ryan Naraine calls it "early death" and this is far from the first security menace in Vista 7. "Microsoft is pulling the plug on the Windows Sidebar and Gadgets platform ahead of news that security vulnerabilities will be disclosed at this year's Black Hat conference," notes the journalist. It sure looks like Microsoft is gradually being pushed to the sidebar in this age when Android/Linux grows rapidly. How come Android, despite its popularity, does not have so many security flaws?
Here is more from the news: "On its July Patch Tuesday, Microsoft released nine security updates to fix a total of 16 vulnerabilities in Windows (XP SP3 and later), Office, Internet Explorer, Visual Basic for Applications and Sharepoint Server. Three of the updates close critical holes, among them an XML Core Services vulnerability that has been actively exploited for over a month." As The Register put it "Microsoft has patched an under-attack zero-day vulnerability in XML Core Services as part of the July edition of Patch Tuesday." [via] ⬆
Comments
mcinsand
2012-07-13 12:52:52
Had MS actually competed with companies like Digital Research at the OS level, Geoworks for desktop manager, Netscape for browsers, Stac for hard drive, ad infinitem... Had MS taken a competitive approach to let markets remain separate, crackers would have a much tougher time breaking into a person's computer.
This is a big part of why I stopped being such an MS fanboy in the 1990's. The PC's fundamental advantage over the Macintoy was freedom of choice; a PC owner could build a software envronment of his/her choice on top of a hardware selection spanning hundreds of choices, rather than only a handful of overpriced options blessed by his royal Jobsness. Windows 95 was the end of that for the PC.
What we have in FOSS is a preservation of that critical freedom. MS users that don't like the Metro interface are an interesting parallel to those of us that use Ubuntu and felt similarly about Unity (I'm one of those.). If you use Windows 8 and don't like the interface, tough. You can't just use yumex or syanptic or muon or whatever to get a new desktop manager, you're just as stuck as if you used a Macintoy. One size doesn't fit all, but, if you can't find a desktop manager to suit you in FOSS, then maybe you don't need to be using a computer. One person tried to argue to me that the ability to choose an environment is a disadvantage, and I guess it is for some people that don't want to deal with choices (if not for them, Apple would be kaput). Once you find a desktop that works, though, you don't have to worry about losing it. So what if Ubuntu standardized on Unity; installing GNOME, KDE, Enlightenment, or whatever is ridiculously easy. Some changes work, some don't, and we have the freedom to pick and choose what is best for us. I was in love with KDE4 from the get-go, although others weren't. Going back to an earlier version is also easy.
Yep, the end of the road for MS is coming. It's of their own choosing, though.