Archive

Archive for March, 2009

Windows 7, so far so good.

March 6th, 2009

Hi there readers.

This is my first post from my Windows 7 Beta machine.

So far I really enjoy the changes in the interface. The settings are finally findable without getting to a read and guess and click marathon. The installation process is very straight forward, very few options are available on the beta verion, and when my desktop loaded for the first time, all my drivers was loaded and operationals.

Honestly, for the first time in my life, I would dare to say that the installation process of a Windows BETA was more easy than Ubuntu. It beats Linux in the installation process (at least on my machine) and so far Photoshop cannot run RELIABLY on Linux. I will just have to sit and for for a while I guess. Still, I am running FreeNAS as personnal home server…

Uncategorized

Do we need a unified desktop?

March 3rd, 2009

It would be great if a new "grand unified api project" would emerge?

I don’t see Apple and Microsoft settling on open API standard anytime soon. What the open source community really need, is a stable platform for software to target.

Here are what I think would help make every system great:

- Something that can run atop many operating systems
- A standard framework for settings which make them exportable/importable
- Make the programs aware of the technical level of your user so they can offer a proper interface

In brief, a framework so great that software vendors will have no other logical choices of target in the long term tan the open standard.

It is indeed a huge task to tackle, the key to realisation is getting everybody to adopt it and eventually move their software to it. That does not mean KDE and Gnome have to come to war or merge their project. It means the programmin interface should be harmonized and portable. KDE seems to have a good lead on that front. I would like software vendos jump the bandwagon of open source.

Bottom line is, the less I pay to get my system running, the more I can pay for specialized software.

With the tightening of the economy is another factor we need to look at. The sooner we invest in standardised open software, the sooner the it will be simple to manage and more economical, enabling small business to be more competitive. Instead of buying software, we hire engineers to setup and adapt existing code.

OpenSTEP died about 20 years ago, the yellow box seems to be abandoned by Apple. Will GnuSTEP really shines or do we need something new?

Posted from the near future (just enought apocalyptic) with the help of Windows 7 Beta.

Uncategorized, computers, it, open source, operating systems, software