Should Microsoft do an Apple?
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doI think it's useless wank from buttonous geek. Oops, sorry to be rude...
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doThey could probably drop Win16 support without too much of a fuss.. '--8<------------------------ Ex Datis: Duncan Jones Merrion Computing Ltd
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doProbably depends upon how they sell it. Maybe if they said "New Vista: 10 times more responsive, twice as lean and bloody mean cos we've left out all the dead crap you don't need anyway". That might work. :) www.merrens.com
www.bkmrx.com You can ignore relatives but the neighbours live next door -
"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doWhy not drop the legacy support, But add an internal emulator that could run the legacy stuff. Kind of a Wine for Windows. It could internally run a version of XP so if you Really needed teh old programs you could run them but it wouldn't clunk down the new inovative stuff. Just my 2cents, I've long wished M$ would release a version of Windows that didn't do so much hand holding, for the people in the know who don't need all the extra padding. My parents for example NEED Windows to do Everything for them but I end up disabling a lot of the cushion stuff...
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doAs I understand it, Microsoft wants to head in the direction of running legacy software in a true emulator built into the operating system, and wrapping legacy extension APIs in a way that allows the extensions to plug in to newer architectures. This will allow more major changes to be made in the core of the OS, and complexity to be reduced, while maintaining backwards compatibility. Obviously that can't be done for everything, but where feasible, the separation of old and new can certainly increase room for change and innovation.
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I think it's useless wank from buttonous geek. Oops, sorry to be rude...
Super Lloyd wrote:
rude
Needlesly so I'd say since legacy support is a real issue and we would be better off without it to some degree. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doYes, the next version of windows should not run anything before .net. Let some 3rd party (or themselves) build something to emulate an older version of windows. how vital enterprise application are for proactive organizations leveraging collective synergy to think outside the box and formulate their key objectives into a win-win game plan with a quality-driven approach that focuses on empowering key players to drive-up their core competencies and increase expectations with an all-around initiative to drive up the bottom-line. But of course, that's all a "high level" overview of things --thedailywtf 3/21/06
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Why not drop the legacy support, But add an internal emulator that could run the legacy stuff. Kind of a Wine for Windows. It could internally run a version of XP so if you Really needed teh old programs you could run them but it wouldn't clunk down the new inovative stuff. Just my 2cents, I've long wished M$ would release a version of Windows that didn't do so much hand holding, for the people in the know who don't need all the extra padding. My parents for example NEED Windows to do Everything for them but I end up disabling a lot of the cushion stuff...
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As I understand it, Microsoft wants to head in the direction of running legacy software in a true emulator built into the operating system, and wrapping legacy extension APIs in a way that allows the extensions to plug in to newer architectures. This will allow more major changes to be made in the core of the OS, and complexity to be reduced, while maintaining backwards compatibility. Obviously that can't be done for everything, but where feasible, the separation of old and new can certainly increase room for change and innovation.
This approach would work for most application software, but probably would not work for drivers and other software that needs closer access to the hardware. ---sig---
Might I suggest that the universe was always the size of the cosmos. It is just that at one point the cosmos was the size of a marble. -- Colin Angus Mackay Silence is the voice of complicity -
"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doI've recently had the experience of having OS/X installed on an OS-9 system. The following conversation ensued: Tech: Do you want to install this as a dual boot configuration? Me: Why would I want to do that? Tech: Because all these old OS-9 apps don't work under OS-X Me: You're kidding. Microsoft never had that problem The conversation didn't proceed very constructively from that point, but I was left with an immense appreciation for what the guys at Microsoft actually have to struggle with. The actual Mac in question takes several minutes to fire up OS-9 compatibility mode. I saw a guy reboot his PowerBook G4 into OS-9. Actually, I never really did see it finish. After 10 minutes, we both walked into the kitchen and made some tea. Whatever the allure to Mac's is, from my experience, simple productivity is more primitive than when Commodore 64's were all the rage. Yes, it's that bad. It's an incredibly unintuitive OS, dialogs are klunky and after 5 or so nestings, it's hard to remember "how did I get here". I remember those problems 20 years ago. But OS-X still has them. Blech. Maybe others have more positive experiences. Maybe I'm biased by using Windows. Maybe I just miss the idea of right-clicking to get the properties of something. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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doIt could be argued that the reason Microsoft has had the ridiculous amount of success that they've enjoyed is because they are sticklers for backwards compatibility. Now, I believe they hung on to "true" MS-DOS a bit too long with the release of Windows ME, but really I'm impressed with the speed and stability of Windows XP. There are two main reasons XP is so slow for so many people: 1) Not enough RAM. You can still get PC's with only 256MB of RAM that have XP installed. That's silly, especially considering how cheap RAM is. 2) Spyware spyware spyware. Backwards compatibility is waaaaaaaaay down the list.
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They could probably drop Win16 support without too much of a fuss.. '--8<------------------------ Ex Datis: Duncan Jones Merrion Computing Ltd
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It could be argued that the reason Microsoft has had the ridiculous amount of success that they've enjoyed is because they are sticklers for backwards compatibility. Now, I believe they hung on to "true" MS-DOS a bit too long with the release of Windows ME, but really I'm impressed with the speed and stability of Windows XP. There are two main reasons XP is so slow for so many people: 1) Not enough RAM. You can still get PC's with only 256MB of RAM that have XP installed. That's silly, especially considering how cheap RAM is. 2) Spyware spyware spyware. Backwards compatibility is waaaaaaaaay down the list.
David Kentley wrote:
Backwards compatibility is waaaaaaaaay down the list.
Couldn't a lighter, more efficient Windows XP have been made that works well in 256MB RAM if it didn't have to support legacy software and hardware? regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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I've recently had the experience of having OS/X installed on an OS-9 system. The following conversation ensued: Tech: Do you want to install this as a dual boot configuration? Me: Why would I want to do that? Tech: Because all these old OS-9 apps don't work under OS-X Me: You're kidding. Microsoft never had that problem The conversation didn't proceed very constructively from that point, but I was left with an immense appreciation for what the guys at Microsoft actually have to struggle with. The actual Mac in question takes several minutes to fire up OS-9 compatibility mode. I saw a guy reboot his PowerBook G4 into OS-9. Actually, I never really did see it finish. After 10 minutes, we both walked into the kitchen and made some tea. Whatever the allure to Mac's is, from my experience, simple productivity is more primitive than when Commodore 64's were all the rage. Yes, it's that bad. It's an incredibly unintuitive OS, dialogs are klunky and after 5 or so nestings, it's hard to remember "how did I get here". I remember those problems 20 years ago. But OS-X still has them. Blech. Maybe others have more positive experiences. Maybe I'm biased by using Windows. Maybe I just miss the idea of right-clicking to get the properties of something. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
The conversation didn't proceed very constructively from that point, but I was left with an immense appreciation for what the guys at Microsoft actually have to struggle with.
No kidding, Raymond Chen's blog is particularly enlightening on that subject. That and the leaked service pack source code that I couldn't help having a nose around in - many comments on the line of "stupid blue chip company x is doing y, so we need to do this". Ryan
"Michael Moore and Mel Gibson are the same person, except for a few sit-ups. Moore thought his cheesy political blooper reel was going to tell people how to vote. Mel thought that his little gay SM movie about his imaginary friend was going to help him get to heaven." - Penn Jillette
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It could be argued that the reason Microsoft has had the ridiculous amount of success that they've enjoyed is because they are sticklers for backwards compatibility. Now, I believe they hung on to "true" MS-DOS a bit too long with the release of Windows ME, but really I'm impressed with the speed and stability of Windows XP. There are two main reasons XP is so slow for so many people: 1) Not enough RAM. You can still get PC's with only 256MB of RAM that have XP installed. That's silly, especially considering how cheap RAM is. 2) Spyware spyware spyware. Backwards compatibility is waaaaaaaaay down the list.
David Kentley wrote:
- Not enough RAM. You can still get PC's with only 256MB of RAM that have XP installed. That's silly, especially considering how cheap RAM is.
If you strip down Windows XP a fair bit, it runs fine for casual tasks (email client, a few MS Word documents, a few browser windows, and a couple of other small apps open at the same time on two different user accounts) with only 128MB of RAM. I was impressed when I saw how well it works on a low-end PC (500MHZ Celeron, 128MB RAM, 6 GB HD).
Two of the biggest problems I see with the fundamental structure of the current versions of Windows (2000/XP/2003) are the "aging" slowdown that occurs as a Windows installation is used for a long period of time, and the massive conglomerate that is the registry. The former is probably related to the latter, and the latter is a problem that is no longer in MS's hands in many ways, because of how many 3rd-party apps store information in the registry - but MS can move away from the registry for their own applications where it won't break 3rd-party apps. Well, that last part reminds me: the registry issue *is* a backwards compatibility issue, and a tough one at that. Maybe it's an example of what the article author is talking about (I only skimmed the article).
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"Microsoft feels it can't get away with breaking compatibility," said Mendel Rosenblum, a Stanford University computer scientist. "All of their applications must continue to run, and from an architectural point of view that's a very painful thing."
Windows Is So Slow, but Why?[^] from the New York Times. It would be a contentious move for sure and I don't think Microsoft are even considering it but what do you think about a future generation of Windows dropping most of its legacy support? Effectively what Apple did with Mac OS a few years back. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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do- Retire very old code (e.g. ISA Bus support doesn't need to be in Vista) - sandbox if possible (i.e. keep it in, but remove dependencies) - beyond that, carry the baggage. Our customers are very conservative, they'd run on Win95 boxes if we'd let them. They don't care about flashiness, inductive UI, Web Apps and XMhelL, but they want us to get our signal processing right, and run it on a Vista box when it gets available. So that's why I'm inclined to backwards compatibility. I have about a dozen modules, with 20..100 (no joke) input parameters which are interdependent (availability, valid range). Some of them spit out hundreds of individual values and 10..100 curves.So any change in UI paradigm is naturally scary for me.
Some of us walk the memory lane, others plummet into a rabbit hole
Tree in C# || Fold With Us! || sighist -
Yes, the next version of windows should not run anything before .net. Let some 3rd party (or themselves) build something to emulate an older version of windows. how vital enterprise application are for proactive organizations leveraging collective synergy to think outside the box and formulate their key objectives into a win-win game plan with a quality-driven approach that focuses on empowering key players to drive-up their core competencies and increase expectations with an all-around initiative to drive up the bottom-line. But of course, that's all a "high level" overview of things --thedailywtf 3/21/06
why?
Some of us walk the memory lane, others plummet into a rabbit hole
Tree in C# || Fold With Us! || sighist -
I've recently had the experience of having OS/X installed on an OS-9 system. The following conversation ensued: Tech: Do you want to install this as a dual boot configuration? Me: Why would I want to do that? Tech: Because all these old OS-9 apps don't work under OS-X Me: You're kidding. Microsoft never had that problem The conversation didn't proceed very constructively from that point, but I was left with an immense appreciation for what the guys at Microsoft actually have to struggle with. The actual Mac in question takes several minutes to fire up OS-9 compatibility mode. I saw a guy reboot his PowerBook G4 into OS-9. Actually, I never really did see it finish. After 10 minutes, we both walked into the kitchen and made some tea. Whatever the allure to Mac's is, from my experience, simple productivity is more primitive than when Commodore 64's were all the rage. Yes, it's that bad. It's an incredibly unintuitive OS, dialogs are klunky and after 5 or so nestings, it's hard to remember "how did I get here". I remember those problems 20 years ago. But OS-X still has them. Blech. Maybe others have more positive experiences. Maybe I'm biased by using Windows. Maybe I just miss the idea of right-clicking to get the properties of something. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
I have seen similar problems with other systems (including earlier Macs) and agree, the hard work microsoft put in is under appreciated. Elaine :rose: The tigress is here :-D
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- Retire very old code (e.g. ISA Bus support doesn't need to be in Vista) - sandbox if possible (i.e. keep it in, but remove dependencies) - beyond that, carry the baggage. Our customers are very conservative, they'd run on Win95 boxes if we'd let them. They don't care about flashiness, inductive UI, Web Apps and XMhelL, but they want us to get our signal processing right, and run it on a Vista box when it gets available. So that's why I'm inclined to backwards compatibility. I have about a dozen modules, with 20..100 (no joke) input parameters which are interdependent (availability, valid range). Some of them spit out hundreds of individual values and 10..100 curves.So any change in UI paradigm is naturally scary for me.
Some of us walk the memory lane, others plummet into a rabbit hole
Tree in C# || Fold With Us! || sighistOne has to say that beyond the flashiness Windows XP is more stable than Windows 95 and that that is a good reason for your customers to use it. regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry! K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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