In Jon Udell’s December 9th weblog entry, he points to several interesting Internet Calendar exchange projects going on. It’s surprising to realize that there is no single standard that lets us all exchange free/busy time, invite people to events, or synchronize meetings with clients/employees/vendors, etc. Such a standard is overdue.
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Scott McNealy duped by a silly Internet hoax
CNET News.com reports This week in the wild, wild Web. “At Oracle OpenWorld, Sun CEO Scott McNealy inadvertently illustrates how easy it is to fall for a high-tech hoax.” McNealy shoud be ashamed. Any good engineer ought to know better.
I got a real kick out of the picture, as it illustrates, in the background, a control center nearly identical to the on the submarine I served on from 1981-1986. It was a chilling flashback for me. At one time or another, I worked at all three of the consoles pictured, and can rattle off what each component is to this day, twenty years later.
Come to think of it, I’m pretty sure I worked on a DECWriter similar to the one in the foreground, in college in the 70’s.
And, no, we didn’t get to watch TV on the submarine.
It Just Works
OSNews notes Mossberg: OS X “Rock Solid”; G5 iMac “Best” PC “Ever Reviewed”. “Wall Street Journal technology columnist Walt Mossberg gave the highest praise possible to not one but two Apple Computer products in his Thursday Personal Technology column, calling Mac OS X “rock solid” and the G5 iMac “the single best desktop computer I have ever reviewed.” Mr. Mossberg used his weekly column to discuss the plague of viruses, spyware and other security problems that primarily affect the Windows platform.”
Mossberg is not the kind of zealot who trumpets every new machine as the greatest thing ever. Over the course of the last year, he has lost his affection for Microsoft, and begun recognizing the other alternatives out there. Having a voice as authoritative as that of the WSJ’s technologist can only help bring more reason to the discussion.
Mozilla Calendar: Sunbird
With the release of Thunderbird, some folks complain that it isn’t an Outlook-killer, as it doesn’t have built in calendaring and task lists (it does have an address book). The Mozilla Foundation is building separate components for most of those features, whereas the Mozilla (nee’ Netscape) browser had everything on one executable file. Jon Udell takes a look at the Sunbird calendar in Jon’s Radio today and reports: Mozilla Calendar. “It’s been a while since I looked at Mozilla Calendar, so this morning I installed the Firefox version and gave it another whirl. My first reaction was that this descendant of Netscape’s calendar program must share a lot of DNA with the original — it feels a tad clunky, UI-wise, in the same kinds of ways…”
IBM selling off PC business to China’s Lenovo
InfoWorld: Top News reports that China’s Lenovo to buy IBM’s PC business. “TOKYO – China’s Lenovo Group Ltd. signed a definitive agreement on Wednesday to acquire IBM Corp.’s personal computing division. Lenovo will pay US$1.25 billion in cash for the business, which is expected to transform it into the world’s number three PC maker, the companies announced.”
This is certainly a worry for those of us who depend on the reliability and ruggedness of our ThinkPads. While the manufacture of the machines has been outsourced for years, the responsibility has always fallen to the company with those three letters on the case: IBM. Expect a conservative IT market to shy away from the machines for a while. With luck, the spinoff can be as successful as the Lexmark deal.
Follow-up: A news.com editorial opines “Why Lenovo-IBM is a tough sell“
IBM selling off PC business to China’s Lenovo
InfoWorld: Top News reports that China’s Lenovo to buy IBM’s PC business. “TOKYO – China’s Lenovo Group Ltd. signed a definitive agreement on Wednesday to acquire IBM Corp.’s personal computing division. Lenovo will pay US$1.25 billion in cash for the business, which is expected to transform it into the world’s number three PC maker, the companies announced.”
This is certainly a worry for those of us who depend on the reliability and ruggedness of our ThinkPads. While the manufacture of the machines has been outsourced for years, the responsibility has always fallen to the company with those three letters on the case: IB/font>. Expect a conservative IT market to shy away from the machines for a while. With luck, the spinoff can be as successful as the Lexmark deal.
Thunderbird 1.0 launches!
The Mozilla organization announces the 1.0 version of their Thunderbird email client has shipped. I’ve been using Thunderbird for a few months on my Windows machines and have enjoyed the ease of use, spam filtering and security.
Red Hat: Truth Happens
Red Hat responds to their competitor’s claims with “Truth Happens:”
“First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win.”
– Mohandas GandhiDecember 6, 2004. Just another day at Red Hat.
The open source software model continues to make better software faster, just as it has for years. New people figure this out every day.
Some wonder why Red Hat doesn’t spend more time defending ourselves. Refuting their “facts” with our “facts.” Fighting to see who can buzz loudest.
Our feeling? We’ll continue to bring choice to our customers. We’ll continue to make better software faster, that scales and is surrounded by a powerful ecosystem of hardware and applications. Software that is priced fairly, and backed by quality service you can trust.
The evidence speaks for itself.
Check out the site for lots of interesting facts.
Eric Meyer: S5: Simple Standards-based Slide Show System
Jeffrey Zeldman Presents: The Daily Report points out It takes a train to laugh.”… check out Eric Meyer’s Simple Standards-based Slide Show System, which lets you turn a single page into an unlimited number of virtual “slides,” complete with Back and Next buttons and a self-generating navigational drop-down menu.” What a slick deisgn! An entire slide show with navigation, CSS for design, display and print and cross-browser compatibility. Really cool!
One of these things is not like the other…
Paul McNett’s Weblog asks “Which Of These Articles Is Doing It’s Own Thing?
Can you pick out the article that just doesn’t seem to fit?
Here’s the link to the eWeek page:
http://www.eweek.com/category2/0,1738,1252525,00.asp?kc=ewnws120204dtx1k0000599“