Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Not the only alternative (Score 1) 164

I totally agree, it would be nice if there was somewhere that could provide a comparison of the different open source Groupware solutions. I in fact, think there is too many groupware projects, so the effort is too diffuse.

I always hoped that Postpath would get open sourced, doesn't look likely now that Cisco have bought them. But it can do one thing none of these can (that I know of), it can pretend to be an Exchange server. This makes migration so much easier for companies migrating (that have lots of Exchange servers).

Comment Re:"Corporate" environment? (Score 2) 249

Our senior exec all carry iPads now.Many have ditched their laptops and just travel with iPads.

All the issues you mention matter to IT. But senior execs want iPad's and it's up to IT to get them into compliance (remote wipe etc).
This is being driven (I guess in most companies) from above (the top) so IT objections have a limited effect.

It does look like a big problem in the Enterprise for MS. I don't think Windows tablets will fly as a replacement.

The whole presentation fails to grasp MS's own original enterprise strategy, this was that you sold to senior execs and IT had to implement (often against their better judgement). This looks like trying to sell to IT, sorry but the iPad has been sold to senior execs and IT will have to implement (against their better judgement, like MS used to do.

Comment The Reason and The Plan (Score 1) 1348

The reason Windows still dominates is so so simple. People stay with what they are used to (esp what came with the computer) unless there is a very good reason to change, the gain must massively outweigh the effort.
Most people just think for example, there is only Office as productivity software, all computers get malware, what's an Operating System and I like that flashy MS advert. Most people aren't computer people.

They think changing will take learning and they don't have time for that, they think. It took them a long time to learn this computer stuff in the first place, so why change, when I'll be lost for ages again like when I first got a computer.

Not being able to download and run cak.exe from random website is confusing to them.

The view is, I'd rather stick with what I know and clean up the bogged down computer every so often, hell the number of people I know now that planned to just buy a new computer when it starts to go slowly is amazing.

The above is the main reason. If we want to get people to change then there has to be massive obvious/superficial advantages.

The first thing to do is probably target the PC gamer / modder market. They are basically low hanging fruit. They'd run anything that'd give them 2 extra FPS on the latest game.
To do this we should be getting very fast video drivers (hopefully Open Source) the proprietary NVIDIA driver is good but they don't seem keen to equal the Windows driver for performance. And I'm afraid it means "finishing" WINE for key apps (and heavily optimising it for games).

I know a lot of people object to WINE as it may stop people developing native Linux apps, and this is a fair criticism. But we must lower the barrier to switching, and this is I'm afraid the only way, people don't want to chuck all their old software to switch to Linux. And if market share grows, native apps will follow.

WINE could do with a "Sugar Daddy" to "finish" it. Come on Google, you put money in so it would run Photoshop, why not invest money in WINE even just to annoy MS!

Comment Re:Solution (Score 1) 120

Mod this up. This is a huge non story. Everything you should really care about should be backed up by the BES into your mail account. I have never backed up my corporate BB and on changing device it preserves pretty much everything I care about, even Browser bookmarks.

Comment Man in the Middle Worries and Avoidance? (Score 3, Interesting) 135

A dodgy trusted SSL authority could trivialise man in the middle attacks (especially with state backing). Can any SSL client apps (Thunderbird/Evolution/Firefox etc) be told to remember an SSL cert for a site and be told to report if it changes? Like how SSH does with it's keys.

It obviously will change when it expires but at least you could examine it ( a really smart client could tell you that just the dates have changed).

Then if a valid new cert was put in place between yourself and the actual site you'd see the change.

Comment Re:they are a business, why should they care? (Score 1) 185

Another thing pointed out by the The Guardian today:

As has been shown in the past, terrorists and insurgents tend to communicate using quick, cheap and untraceable technology. The BlackBerry is not really any of these things, since the handset's entire function is to weave its way into its owner's professional (often corporate) and personal life, so as to be an extremely efficient means to trace and reach them.

I think that seems pretty true

Comment Re:No usb Support (Score 1) 427

And TomTom and other SatNav update software, that despite the hardware being based on Linux the darn update software is Windows only!! USB wine support should fix that.

Slashdot Top Deals

To restore a sense of reality, I think Walt Disney should have a Hardluckland. -- Jack Paar

Working...