Thursday, October 05, 2006

Where Microsoft fails

Since the early days of Novell's PC networking, it was clear that Microsoft didn't have a clue what to do about networking. While Novell's networking simply worked seamlessly with MS DOS, Microsoft's Lan Manager was a clumsy black art. It only became popular when it was integrated into Daytona (which became Windows NT, which became Windows 2000, which became Windows XP, ... 2003, Longhorn ...).

Microsoft's next attempt was in distributed objects. The basic technology was Distributed Common Object Model, DCOM. This was a big fat ugly technology, but elegant when compared to other Microsoft services such as OCX, OLE2. They've continued to believe that network speeds will improve with CPU speeds. To everyone else, this is obviously never going to happen.

The next attempt at networking was to provide a Multics style computing service, where all the important apps are distributed on Microsoft servers. You'll then have to pay a Microsoft utility bill to access your own stuff. The technology to make this happen? .NET. After some years of dabbling with .NET, Microsoft still don't offer a platform and tools to develop the latest .NET 2 apps and the existing .NET 1.1 apps.

Enter Google. Have you seen Google Mail, Calendar, Spreadsheet? They're bloody good applications. They're easy to use, and slick to look at. And of course, there's searching on nearly everything. If Google brings out an online word processor, it'll be all over. The Operating System will just be a tool to access the world wide internet and run viruses.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

A dogs life

Yesterday, while driving through East Dulwich, I saw a mature woman walking with a Philipino younger woman who was leading an immaculately groomed dog. The dog suddenly stopped in the middle of the pavement, and the elder woman got her plastic bag ready to collect what the dog was about to leave.

Today, while driving through East Dulwich again, I saw a different Philipino young woman walking a beautifully groomed Collie. The poor girl was about to pickup what this dog had left.

Conclusions. Either an au pair's job has become more than looking after children or these dogs are treated as children. Wealthy women have gone off blondes.