
'Linux-Haters Blog' Signs Off  As of last Saturday, the infamous Linux Hater's Blog has signed off. Seekers of curmudgeonly wisdom about Linux cleverly disguised as flaming bile will have to look elsewhere. And, strangely enough, I already miss him. Back in May or so, the LHB started posting a patented brand of blunt-nosed realism, foul-mouthed trash-talking, and brutal humor of the Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog variety. Over time, though, a pattern and (no!) a method to the madness emerged: he wasn't actually against Linux per se, but what he saw as the forest of inadequacies, incompetence, lame excuses, bad planning, and even worse execution that prevented Linux from being all that it could be. His rants could tear the skin off a rhinoceros. He railed against the insane maze that was Linux audio, he showed up the fallacy of choice as being a primary reason Linux was doomed to never make headway on the desktop, and let fly at the Linux graphics layer for being a mess of hackwork. (Warning: all of those links contain Denis-Leary-in-concert levels of swearing.) He was also that much more technically informed about his subjects than most of the people who go on anti-Linux tirades. And when he dialed back the vitriol and made his case plainly, it was hard to see how he was wrong: [C]urrent lusers [his euphemism for "Linux users"; you can guess why he chose this particular term] don't want choice between two or more options that are broken. They want a working baseline, and then they want to be able to make all the choices they personally care about. Unfortunately, there are very few projects that are concentrated on developing this working baseline. Instead they usually try to build one small piece of the puzzle, then make it interface with as many other parts in numerous and useless ways. You know why I'm going to miss him? Not because he had the potty-mouthed outlandishness of Andrew Dice Clay -- although some people love that sort of thing, what can I say -- but because he went places few others dared to go and didn't apologize for his excesses. One of William Blake's most-repeated quotes is, "The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom," and while I don't always agree that's the only way to get to wisdom's palace, it can be one of the most entertaining ones. Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/syegulalp/ What do you think? Will you miss the Linux-Hater's Blog. Let us know. Serdar Yegulalp thegline@optonline.net www.informationweek.com |
|  Join InformationWeek along with event sponsors, Novell, Accenture and PlateSpin this November for an executive breakfast seminar to learn how high performing businesses are managing virtualization in the data center. You will hear from leading experts on how to manage a heterogeneous environment and how to avoid some of the most common pitfalls in virtualizing your data center. Best Practices in Virtualization ManagementThursday, November 6, 2008 - Los Angeles, CA Wednesday, November 19, 2008 - Philadelphia, PA http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/hBM5n0NQpRY0G4n0Fvbv0Ea "A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing." -- Emo Philips  7 iPhone Apps Worth Paying For Airsharing, NotepadSync, and Twittelator Pro are just a few of the inexpensive apps that can turn your iPhone or Touch into a more powerful tool. | InformationWeek Reports: The State Of Virtualization | Everyone's doing it; eventually, you will, too. This 360-degree report takes a look at what gets virtualized and when. DOWNLOAD NOW |  CAMPAIGN 2008 Election Resource Center Joe the Plumber shoved business owners into the election spotlight, but there's more to the candidates' SMB vision than tax policy. Still on the fence? These resources may help you decide.  Deutsche Telekom May Own Too Much Of T-Mobile While reviewing the Verizon acquisition of Alltel, the FCC revealed that Deutsch Telekom may violate the 20% voting stock threshold. Defense Intelligence Agency Fixes Risky Web Site Code The presence of a call to execute JavaScript code that resides on a Statcounter.com server in Ireland provided a weak link in the security chain that could have been exploited. Alcatel-Lucent CEO Steers Firm To A Lower Loss New chief Ben Verwaayen's firm reported a loss of $51.8 million for its third quarter on a 6.6% drop in sales of $5.15 billion. Sprint Finalizes Early Termination Fee Policy The telecom said its $200 fee will be reduced by $10 per month after month six, but the new policy will only affect contracts signed after Nov. 2. Phillies Parade Live Online Major League Baseball on Friday scheduled an all-day Phillies Webfest. Flash Memory Market To See First Revenue Decline This Year Flash memory chips are used in PCs, but nearly 80% of the chips sold each year end up in personal media players, storage cards and USB flash drives. iPhone Adoption Fastest Among Penny Pinchers Research shows that low-income groups are relying on smartphones for a range of communication needs. Google Makes Scanned Documents Searchable Using optical character-recognition technology, Google will make the converted text of scanned PDFs available on its search results pages via the "View as HTML" link. Sprint Won't Sell Nextel iDEN Network The plan now is to partner with Motorola and move the iDEN spectrum out of the 800-MHz band in a way that will accommodate public-safety networks. Phoenix Mars Lander Losing Power, Communications Dust storms on the red planet are limiting the craft's supply of solar energy. 100,000 Sony Batteries Recalled The batteries found in Dell, HP, and Toshiba PCs were sold in the same time frame as Sony notebook batteries involved in a massive recall in 2006. Avaya Appoints CEO As Giancarlo Becomes Chairman Kevin Kennedy, currently CEO of communications manufacturer JDSU (formerly JDS Uniphase), will step in next January. All Our Latest News  See InformationWeek's daily breaking news on your mobile device, visit mobile.informationweek.com and sign up for daily SMS notifications. 
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|   Virtualization At The Desktop? Examine how more than 250 companies plan to adopt server virtualization technology in this recent InformationWeek Research report, Server Virtualization. The BI Explosion Examine the business intelligence strategies of 500 companies, including deployment drivers and challenges, spending plans, and vendor selection, in this recent InformationWeek Research report.  VC Drought? 70 Million Exceptions To The Rule Anxiety is high in Silicon Valley over an anticipated decline in VC funding, but investment money hasn't dried up yet. In the past few days, a handful of startups have pulled in $70 million. Green Politics 2008: Troy The Turbine Builder Now that Joe The Plumber has a manager, I thought I'd give equal time to Troy the Turbine Builder. Will Verizon Wireless Give Away The BlackBerry Storm For Free? Verizon Wireless' U.K. partner, Vodafone, recently announced that it will give the BlackBerry Storm to users for free if they sign up for new contracts. Can Verizon Wireless afford to do the same thing? Drupal Takes Home 2008 Overall Open Source CMS Award Drupal cleaned up for the second year in a row in the 2008 Open Source CMS Awards, taking home both the Overall Open Source CMS Award and the Best Open Source PHP CMS Award. This marks the first time in which a content management system has ever won the overall award in back-to-back years. NIST Seeks New Hash Algorithm NIST is wrapping up accepting submissions for a new cryptographic one-way hash algorithm today. NIST's competition follows a tradition of peer review, public discussion, and acceptance of algorithms that brought us DES, SHA, and AES. The selection process won't be complete until 2012, but final selection should addresses weaknesses in the hash algorithms used today. Verizon Wireless Teaches Retail Reps How To Bash The G1 Not one to sit on its laurels, Verizon Wireless is taking the interest in T-Mobile's G1 Android phone seriously by providing its sales reps with ammunition to shoot it down. Another list of "talking points" has been circulated, and it tells us what Verizon really thinks of the G1. Obama's Online Answer Center Fields Tough Questions Everyone is worried about the economy. But surprisingly, the economy isn't the subject of the top three questions people are asking online at an "answer center" run by Barack Obama's presidential campaign. Visitors are most interested in whether Obama is a Christian and a patriot, and they want to know his position on women's issues. Apple: No Opera Mini For The iPhone Opera Mini and Opera Mobile are highly capable browsers for mobile phones. Opera, which also makes a full desktop browser for both Windows and Apple machines, created a version of Opera Mini that will run on the iPhone. Too bad Apple won't allow Opera to offer it through the iPhone App Store. SSDs Are Not Confusing Seems like every vendor I speak with is laying out its solid-state disk (SSD) strategy, and almost all say they're trying to help the customer through this confusing platform change. It's not confusing. Cyber Attacks Targeting UK National Infrastructure A key U.K. IT security defense leader says that continuous cyberattacks are targeting U.K. businesses that work in the nation's critical infrastructure. Motorola Causing A Ruckus Motorola sure gave us some interesting news today. The quarterly loss of nearly $400 million and thousands of layoffs always jump out at you, but, digging a little deeper, I couldn't help but wonder where Symbian fits into Moto's plans.  Real-World SOA: Definition, Implementation and Use of SOA with CentraSite Web services are having a dramatic impact on improving enterprise architecture and application development practices. This paper highlights three sample case studies illustrating how Fujitsu's CentraSite delivers SOA solutions. Forrester Consulting: Unified Communications Delivers Global Benefits This Forrester Consulting study shows how Unified Communications (UC) makes it simpler to contact others over any device in any location, enhancing business agility, cutting costs, and boosting employee productivity. Forrester finds that UC is already delivering major savings for organizations around the world in retail banking, manufacturing and education. Download the full report for free. Software as a Service Research Report No longer a niche software delivery model, software as a service (SaaS) can help small and midsize companies get access to enteprise-class software functionality without having to commit enterprise-level capital resources. Download the full report for free. The Internet & The Developing World The evolution of the Internet has been full of surprises - surprises that have sometimes resulted in radical changes in the commercial landscape, such as the arrival of Amazon, eBay, Google, YouTube, and Skype. Could one of the next big surprises turn out to be linked to developing countries? Read the full report for free from InternetEvolution.com  Featured Jobs: Shure Incorporated seeking Project Manager in Niles, IL INVIA Medical Imaging Solutions seeking Software Engineer in Ann Arbor, MI Hebrew Rehabilitation Center seeking Senior Network Analyst in Boston, MA Lowes seeking DC Systems Technician I in Lebanon, OR FedSources seeking Director of Web Products in McLean, VA For more great jobs, career-related news, features and services, please visit our Career Center.  Try InformationWeek's RSS Feed
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