Archive | January, 2005

Don’t think different — think practical

Tom Yager’s weekly column at InfoWorld, timed well to land during MacWorld week, is titled “Try as I might, I can’t wreck a Mac” — a switcher endorsement, not from a blurry-eyed preteen or a a hip DJ, but from the guy who runs the testing labs at a IT publication. The best line: “I expect the iMac G5 will prove comparable to other 64-bit, zero-footprint Unix RISC desktops with integrated 20-inch LCD displays. (That’s a joke, son.)”

For those of you not in on the joke. there are no competitors.

Cringely: Stay away from Microsoft anti-malware

Cringely writes in his weekly I, Cringely that Microsoft getting into the anti-malware business is a bad idea, both from their motivations and history:

Microsoft has always hated firms that sell products that enhance their operating systems. They hate sharing revenue with others. Microsoft has to be envious and annoyed by the fact Symantec and others get more recurring revenue from Windows than Microsoft does.

Time will tell.

I don’t think Microsoft will be offering a version for OS X or Linux.

Knoppix raising computers from the dead

I’m setting up a machine in the server room to duplicate the configuration I’ll be installing at a client next month. The machine had been my desktop computer last year, running WinXP Pro, until it developed a terminal case of the Windows Blues and would not let anyone log on, locally, remotely, via Samba shares, nothing. I booted it up with the Knoppix CD in the SCSI CD-ROM and Knoppix dealt with the oddball hardware, booted the machine, and acted as a Samba server so I could copy off the old files over the network before blowiing it away. Pretty amazing.

Welcome to 2005!

Hope you made it through to 2005. I’ve made some significant changes in the Radio Userland software. I’m now running it on the iMac. Transfer seemed to go very smoothly, but if I disappear, you’ll understand why.

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This work by Ted Roche is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States.