[CLUE-Talk] Microsoft incompetence of negligence?

Sean LeBlanc seanleblanc at americanisp.net
Mon Aug 25 12:36:22 MDT 2003


On 08-24 18:29, Dennis J Perkins wrote:
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A34978-2003Aug23.html
> 
> This is an interesting article on the fact that says Windows is insecure 
> by design.  While it can be argued that Windows users are responsible 
> for applying patches, it can also be argued that it should not be 
> necessary to apply so many patches, and on a nearly daily basis. 
> Besides, patches should be tested before applying them to a network of 
> computers.  I suspect companies are starting to consider suing Microsoft 
> after these last two weeks.  Never mind that the license says MS is only 
> responsible for replacing defective CDs.  Microsoft has cost companies 
> millions or billions of dollars in labor, lost sales, etc, because of 
> the problems inherent in thier products.
> 
> It might also spur legislation limiting how much software companies can 
> avoid liability.  This is unfortunate.  Hopefully such legislation will 
> be balanced because the truth is that it is very difficult to remove all 
> bugs from software.  Maybe software can be rated on the basis of its 
> history, since it is impossible to rate it on bugs that have yet to be 
> discovered.  But those bugs should give some indication to the quality 
> of that software.
> 
> And maybe the govt should also mandate that any software it buys adheres 
> to certain accepted open standards.  I'm not saying it needs to create 
> the standards.  But I think that even MS would be forced to adhere to 
> open standards or lose a lot of business.  And companies that deal with 
> the govt would also want those standards.  It could be a chain reaction. 
> Most of Micrsoft's profits in software come from its operating systems 
> and Office.  Document and communication protocol standards weaken that 
> monopoly.

LOL - he mentions those "Protect Your PC" ads. I tore one out of my WSJ last
week and hung it up in my cube. A co-worker wrote in a step 0: "Deinstall
Windows".

As for CIOs getting summarily fired for using/recommending Windoze - I wish.
Last place I worked at we were finally moving towards Linux for at least the
*servers*. Then, whoosh, we got the new boy wonder CTO and bam, it was all
"rah, rah, Microsoft"...and any independent thinkers got laid off. Whee.

This genius even wanted to move the codebase (eventually, he so graciously
said. Using what rationale other than looking at MS' latest brochure for
PHBs, I dunno.) to .NET!!! Talk about pure visionary genius[0]. At least our
code was Java, and crafted in a way to be somewhat database-agnostic. Even
though it resided on Windoze, and used MS SQL Server, it at least made
minimal use of stored procedures and db-specific calls and could have been
moved to literally any box using nearly any database (with a few minor
changes). But, nah, all MS all the time for this guy. More stored
procedures! More ASP! More IIS! More MS crap-ware! And of *course* he didn't
get punished for pushing the company toward more vendor lock-in.... 


[0] I know the dotgnu project is trying to make sure .NET doesn't succeed in
MS' lock-in goal, but this guy would have made sure to make developers use
.NET-only features somehow...at one point I was so puzzled by his fervor for
MS that I actually asked him if he used to work for them. He answered that
"they make the best-of-breed tools". Cue some goofy cartoon sound effects
here...

-- 
Sean LeBlanc:seanleblanc at americanisp.net  
http://users.americanisp.net/~seanleblanc/
Get MLAC at: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mlac/
Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten. 
-B. F. Skinner 



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