>>but would be very comfortable in saying this will not >>occur. Had MS wanted to follow a *nix like path, they could have a long time >>ago... They were doing *nix back in 1980. >> >> >> >Error. read ur history. they never DID. they bought it. Called Xenix. >Like all technology in M$ product, its often stolen or bought. If they >could have integrated a nix type kernel at the time while keeping full >DOS compatibility ( as majority of software at that time rested on DOS >), they would have. They've got bsd telnet, tracert, whole bsd tcp ip >stack for win2000 ( go read www.insecure.org/namp/ for explanations on >the MS tcp/ip stack). They obviously don't excel in the unix word ( nor >networking world ) if they have to steal such bricks in 'their' OS >writting process.
Like I said, they were doing *nix back in 1980. Whether they bought it or created it, they had it IF they wanted to use it. I have no doubt in their ability to have integrated it with the other stuff they were doing if they had chosen to. They didn't choose to. As for where the stack and those tools came from, I have legal access to the OS source, I can see where it comes from. You aren't as accurate as you would like to think. >>Two things. First, have you seen Monad? If not, you might want to look at it >>before even trying to spout your normal uninformed opinion. You will >>probably find that someone is going to be trying to duplicate portions of >>that functionality in your favorite non-MS OS shortly. Second, now you are >>whining about names? >I am talking the piss of a company that refuted unix for years, to >finally integrate it. ?. The creation of a new shell isn't integrating *nix. Once again, go check out Monad before spouting. It definitely isn't *nix but I can say that there will be some people on the *nix side trying to duplicate some things. Again this is good. If you see someone else doing something good, work it into your product as well. If this didn't happen, the face of the various *nix knockoffs would be very different, none of them would be allowed to use something good someone else had figured out. That wouldn't make much sense. > >Err no, their goal is to maintain a profit and compete > With no competitors ? You are free to believe what you will. The investments MS has made in other software/computer companies though should help you understand the answer to that one. >>>M$ business model is a threat to our freedom, and i would >>>like our childrens to have a choice, and not be formated >>>the M$ way. >>> >>> >> >>Last I looked, MS wasn't the only OS writer out there and you aren't being >>forced to use it. >> >You are. Can you buy a x86 computer with no M$ on it ? Do you know that >laptops get their warrantees voided if you remove M$ from it ? Absolutely you can buy machines without Microsoft Software. As for your second comment, there probably are cases that this is true but there are also laptops you can buy with Linux on them or no OS on them. My last 3 machines I have purchased have all had no OS on them. You can even buy a desktop from Dell with Linux though I understand from my Dell friends they don't sell very well. >> How is it that your children won't have a choice? Or are >>you forecasting the death of the *nix derivitives? I hope not and expect you >>are wrong if you are, they have their uses. >Cause they already don't have a choice now. They get given laptops with >M$ on it at school. Now ...whos trolling here ? Schools are giving kids laptops now? Do you mean they are letting kids use school laptops? In that case, this is a choice of the school. This isn't MS saying it has to be that way. Buy your kid his/her own laptop, don't rely on the school and people's tax dollars. Then put whatever the heck you want on it. Alternatively, load up vmware on the laptop and run Linux or BSD in the virtual machine. >Do not even go there. Why do they have it installed at home in the first >place ? So Its a monopoly, and have to just shut the fsck up, accept >it, keep quiet and pay ? Don't think, we did it for you before with >loads of money invested too, so that surely is a factor of trust. >Criticism is banned. Yeah thats fair. I think it is there because MS has done the most to get the computers into people's homes. They have done the most to make machine's usable for everyone and inexpensive enough for many. The only other company that has done anything decent in these areas is Apple and that is in the former, not the latter category. Apple gave tons of machine's away in schools to hook kids into wanting them and that didn't work out so well because the costs were still a bit much for people at home. Now we have a case where the free OSes are realizing that the world isn't going to change to use their OS, so they change to be as similar as possible to the OS that is on top. I actually think this is great, it opens up the choices. However don't expect right around the corner Mr. and Mrs. Smith and their 2.3 children will be running BSD at home. It isn't there yet and at present, the interface is still chasing what MS has, not revolutionizing it. You obviously also do not understand the concept of a monopoly. A monopoly is when there is only one supplier of a good or service, there is no choice period. This does not describe situation we have. Anyway, it isn't an end to monopoly you are looking for. It is an end to MS, if SUSE (or name your fav vendor) should all of a sudden become immensely popular and own 99% of the desktops you would be singing some religious hymn about it. Not touting how bad monopolies are. Criticism is absolutely not banned, but if you are going to criticize, understand what you are talking about. You run around spouting half truths and incorrect information intermixed with religious quotes like it means something simply because you believe it must be so probably because you have heard it from 14 other religious zealots. > Define security ? Define company Policy of Internet and Computer usage ? Consider the real world. We actually didn't back down on our stance of what we did, though we took a beating for a long time over it. Even the lower costs of support didn't quell the complaining. While it is true the PCs are the company's PCs and any way they want to configure them is up to them, they also have to look at whether or not the configuration causes a slow down in productivity. If people are always bitching because they can't load their favorite news program (pointcast was the big one back then) productivity goes down. You can threaten the people with disiplinary action but you can't fire your entire marketing department or treasury department. > So thats the reason to still give administrator rights to the default > install ? Do you realise that unpatched machines get infected in a > breeze because the default user has Administrator rights ? If I install Linux or BSD right now from CD, do I or do I not have root access? Am I allowed to log on and use root? > The cost in patching is nothing compare to cost in software > licenses....and that's what it was about. LOL! At home, I completely agree with you. Get a job in a large company some time. And by large I mean hundreds of thousands of machines. > Are you an idiot ?? Do you understand technically why a virus CANNOT > EASILY spread on a nix based permissions filesystem ? If not, look up to Nope, and contrary to your writing I don't believe you are either. I just think you may be misinformed and bit too far into the zealot stage. You seem to think that every issue is due to some hole, totally disregarding the issues with users simply doing anything they are told to do in an email or instructions. Is it tougher to spread something in the *nix world, yes. Is it because it is inherently safer? No. >> >> >>My Windows machines I use do real multitasking, are stable, and are not >>prone to virii. >> >Yours. The average compromised box out there isn't. And in 90 % of the >cases, it is a M$ machine. Coincidence ? Sure.... Nope, not at all. Consider the penetration of Windows compared to anything else. Windows has more dumb users than any other operating system in the history of computers. Simple fact, you can't get around it. If they all jumped to Mac OSX, Mac OSX would have the most dumb users in the history of computers. As surely as that number moving so would the most attacked and penetrated platform numbers move. If the level of intelligence and capability of Windows users came up to the level of Linux users and especially of BSD users then many issues would slide into the background. Unfortunately for Linux, its user's intelligence averages are going to go down as they get more penetration of the desktops. Watch how Linux gets dumbed down for their use and as issues start to creep in more and more. > 1) Get your facts right before defending some company that obviously you > don't know. Ever read the EULA ? I doubt. > 2) Accept that Cristicism will always enrich our vision and accept that > people CAN, and SHOULD for obvious reasons, not feel part of that MASS > that you embrass. Happy to feel normal ? I agree with these statements. Get your facts straight. As for criticism, I fully accept it. I dish out far more of it to MS than I think you ever will, I just tend to do it in a forum that will accomplish something. I have had MS chasing me down for pissing them off. I have also watched them slowly trying to get better. As I always say on this list, I don't look at this as religion. I think religion as screwed the world up enough. A lot of stupid people saying and doing a lot of stupid things in the name of religion, whether than be for a god or for an OS. So now, to bring this back... Do you have any valid gripes about XP SP2 that have encountered, or is your entire story one of whining about things you don't really know about? -----Original Message----- From: devis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, August 16, 2004 3:23 PM To: joe; Full-disclosure Subject: Re: [Full-Disclosure] lame bitching about xpsp2 joe wrote: _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html