Tag Archives | Microsoft

Microsoft and Sun recommend… their products!

OSNews points to EDS: Linux is insecure, unscalable. Large enterprises should not use Linux because it is not secure enough, has scalability problems and could fork into many different flavours, according to the Agility Alliance, which includes IT heavyweights EDS, Fuji Xerox, Cisco, Microsoft, Sun, Dell and EMC.”

And what exactly is the purpose of this “alliance?” According to the article, to compete with IBM and HP. What a surprise. And what software do they favor? Theirs, of course. What nonsense!

All OSes likely have an appropriate place in a well planned enterprise.

Apple may release 2-button mouse, can ergonomic keyboards be far behind?

OSNews points to the story making the rounds that “Apple May Release Two Button Mouse. According to AppleInsider Apple is working on a two button mouse to further assist people switching from Windows.” Isn’t it a bit early for April Fool’s columns to be hitting the internet?

I’ve been running my iMac for a year with a Microsoft Wireless Optical Mouse Blue. Just plugged it in, and the right mouse button pops open context menus, the scrollwheel scrolls and the middle click pastes in terminal windows. It Just Works.

Microsoft and Burst.com in negotiations for settlement

Computerworld News reports “Burst, Microsoft reach tentative settlement in antitrust case. Burst.com had filed its lawsuit against Microsoft in 2002, alleging that the software vendor stole patented technology and trade secrets concerning Internet-based video-on-demand for its Windows Media Player.

This’ll be a real disappointment if it comes to pass, although Microsoft likely had little choice. Burst had pretty damning evidence that not only had Microsoft infringed on Burst’s intellectual property, but also alleged some pretty explosive evidence that Microsoft had systematically and intentionally destroyed email records to hide those earlier violations. This has been a crusade of the columnist known pseudonymously as Robert X. Cringely in columns here and here testify.

Anything you can do I can do… better?

At the Intel Developer Forum last week, Intel showed off a concept home media case and got some attention from the trade press in a pitiful “Me, too!” effort to try to make Intel-based machines as cool as the Mac Mini.

“Thus far, the concept PC is just a piece of plastic, literally, although its design showed a clock display and optical drive in front, with ports such as USB, optical audio and FireWire in the back.”

You wonder who they are learning innovation from…

Imitation may be flattery, but what’s next? Intel imitation Rolexes?

Hint: it’s not the pretty box. It’s the features, the included software, the slick operating sytem that Just Works , the ease of use, the slick marketing and, yes, cachet that makes the Mac Mini what it is. The $499 (and up) price tag and the pretty box are just facets of that. Intel needs to learn to think different-ly.

Doc Searls weighs in on the Google Toolbar AutoLink feature

The Doc Searls Weblog posts Markets are Relationships, Part N. “Anyway, here’s the problem: Google is an advertising company, more than a search company. That’s becoming clearer with this feature, and the company’s apparent lack of interest in the feedback they’ve been getting.”

Insightful column, with many references and links to other thinkers on this matter. I’ll be interested in Google’s response.

Doc missed the boat on the last item, though: “Note: Microsoft dropped whatever-it-was [later: SmartTags] that Autolink does as well. Why? Because Microsoft listened to its customers.” I don’t think so. I think Microsoft dropped SmartTags from IE and from visibility because they were taking too much flack in the media. Like HailStorm or Palladium or other MSFT maneuvers, they are alive and well and being repackaged, renamed and slip-streamed into other products. Keep an eye on them.

No Patch Tuesday?

Microsoft Watch from Mary Jo Foley notes A Quiet Patch Tuesday on the Way. “Read our lips: No new Microsoft security patches next Tuesday.”

Pretty hard to believe.

Don’t mistake this for “there are no outstanding security problems” but rather “there are no solutions available for outstanding security problems.” I’m sure there are folks in the back room in Redmond working hard to address them. All software has vulnerabilities. SANS has a great list of the Top 20.

Dan Gillmor and the Google Toolbar

Dan Gillmor on Grassroots Journalism, Etc. reports Google Toolbar, an Update. UPDATED

“I had lunch yesterday with several Google folks including Marissa Mayer, the company’s director of consumer Web products, to discuss the new Google Toolbar, which is now in beta.

“Like several other people, I have raised serious questions about this product’s new “AutoLink” tool. It strikes me as an intrusion into people’s browsers by a company that commands great market share.

“She listened to my concerns. And she explained Google’s stance — nothing new there, and it amounts to “this is all for the users’ benefit” defense. I am not convinced, however, that Google will end up doing the right thing in the end.

“As Search Engine Watch asks in this piece: “Why are publishers upset? Can they block the feature that adds links to their web pages? Who rules over content, users or publishers?”

“Good and fair questions — but Google hasn’t sufficiently answered them.

“At the very least, Google needs to make some changes in the installation process. As users install the toolbar they should be asked if they want features that change content on web pages. There should be an opt-in process, not an opt-out process, for such things.

“I have trouble with Search Engine Watch’s Danny Sullivan’s view that publishers of Web sites should be able to opt out of the toolbar changes. In theory, once I have content on my desktop it should be my right to “remix” it in the way I choose.

“What Google isn’t taking into account is that its market power, and the tendency of users to accept the default — to eat what’s on the plate someone puts in front of them — will tend to create Google’s version of the Web, not the users’ version. We all hates Microsoft’s Smart Tags idea because it gave more, unearned power to Microsoft. Google doesn’t have that same dominance, but it has enough to worry about.

“Will Google do the right thing? This is a big test.

(By the way, Mayer said that while Microsoft’s former Smart Tags guy is working for Google now, he’s not involved in the Toolbar project.)

I’m surprised that Dan isn’t focused on what I see as the large issue here – the copyright violation that Google commits when they alter content they don’t own. On my web site, I plug one of my books, Essential SourceSafe with a link to the publisher’s web site, where you can buy this book. Buying it directly from the publisher benefits the publisher in less cost and consequently greater profit, some of which is passed on to me. The ISBN is listed on the page; the reader is free to copy this number and paste it into a book store search on BookPool, eBay, Barnes and Noble, Amazon or any other book seller they wish. (Better a sale than no sale, right?) But if the web browser has Google Toolbar installed, I’m told that ISBN is turned into a link to Amazon. Who’s making the profit on that link to Amazon? Not me. I’ll bet Google does. So, I lose money on a web page I wrote and support and host, and Google gains? I’m not comfortable with that.

How different is it for Google to provide this service automatically from the user doing it manually? There’s a fine line between offering convenience to the user, offering the ability to remix incoming content, and the act of automatically rewriting it for the profit of others. Most browsers offer the ability to apply a stylesheet of your own choice to incoming content — bumping up the fonts or increasing the contrast for a visually impaired user for example — and this is a good, empowering feature. But adding or rewriting links for the benefit of third party is different. Isn’t this what some adware does? This is troubling.

Microsoft gave in to public pressure and published support for a META tag that would disable SmartTag processing on a web page, but this still puts the burden on the author and copyright holder and does not require the software using the page to respect the copyright and license of the content. It needs to be the other way — let writers opt in if they want their work rewritten. I wonder who would opt in?

Microsoft security woes: new Sober worm variant

Computerworld News reports “New Sober worm moving fast, security company warns. W32.Sober-K-mm, a new variant of the Sober worm, is a mass-mailer that today began attacking computers in Europe and in the United States.”

Meanwhile, OSNews reports that Gartner takes Microsoft to task. “Microsoft should be concentrating on securing Windows instead of trying to challenge security software companies, according to research firm Gartner.”

“Gartner’s MacDonald also rapped Microsoft’s decision to create an updated version of Internet Explorer (7.0) for Windows XP only, hinting that motive for the decision could be to push corporate customers into upgrade their systems from Windows 2000.”

If that’s true, I think it is a risky move. By announcing IE 7.0, supposedly in beta this summer, Microsoft is admitting that their current offerings are insufficient and that patching will not solve the problem. It’s February. Any CIO that wants to be employed this fall ought to be looking at alternatives today: FireFox, Opera, Safari. The option to “upgrade” to Windows XP, a major change management move involving an OS upgrade followed by innumerable patches, is a huge obstacle compared to downloading another browser and installing it.

The web page you see might not be what the author wrote

Scripting News cites News.Com: “Google’s browser toolbar is raising eyebrows over a feature that inserts new hyperlinks in Web pages, giving the Internet search provider a powerful tool to funnel traffic to destinations of its choice.”

Scripting News goes on to quote John Robb quoting Anil Dash: “Google is pushing its ads into content it does not own.”

Like Microsoft’s Smart Tags, that is modifying content that they do not own. If the content happens to be your material, how do you feel about Google infringing on your right to present it as you have chosen? Is this copyright infringement?

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