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Comment Re:Considering this is Windows... (Score 1) 471

You are missing the point. If you have a harddrive sized 20Gb, make a folder A/ in it, make a folder B/ in it, and add a hard link inside B to A, then fill A up with 20GB, then look at the sized of both A and B, explorer will show they are each 20GB, for a "total" of 40GB on your 20GB disk. It is not preventing you from using anything because the disk is full warning comes from NTFS's block allocator, which works on a lower level than hark links.

Comment Some size values (unscientific) (Score 2) 471

So I have been trying to figure out what on earth is taking up the 13GB, and here is what I have so far:

Recovery and EFI partitions - 4.0 GB
There are two recovery and one system partitions. The system partition appears to be there for EFI.
Pagefile.sys and Swapfile.sys - 2.6 GB
Virtual Memory!
Program Files - 1.0 GB
This is mostly Office, with a few other things thrown in: IE, Windows Contacts, Photo Viewer, etc. Office occupies about 630MB
Windows/System32 - 1.75 GB
This is the core of the OS
Windows/Fonts - 400 MB
Some really large font-files here, but Windows does ship to a huge international audience with complex script support.
Windows/Speech - 400 MB
Speech Recognition and Text-to-Speech.
Windows/IME - 200 MB
This is the support for inputting complex scripts among other things. Dominated by Japanese, Simplified and Traditional Chinese.
Windows/Microsoft.NET - 200 MB
.NET framework

I also have about 800 MB in a SoftwareDistribution folder, but that may be tainted by Windows Update (there were patches available on the first day, literally, weighing in at 600+ MB - for the Office update to RTM among others). Another curiosity is that there is a 10 MB SysWOW64 folder for some reason. Aside, I have not checked how big the system registry hives are.

My user folder is about 2.0 GB, most of which is in Windows Store apps. Still trying to find a way to visualize how much each application takes.

So far that adds up to 10.55 GB (11.35 if including SoftwareDistribution). I have purposely left out the WinSxS folder, because I have no way to telling what its real on-disk footprint is until I figure out how to scan a folder for hard links, which may not be possible on WindowsRT.

Comment Re:Considering this is Windows... (Score 1) 471

That particular myth has been debunked a bunch of times, but here goes again.

WinSxS is the least understood component in Windows. For the most part it contains hard links (not symbolic links, which Windows Explorer understands do not occupy space) to other places on the system. See here (http://www.davidlenihan.com/2008/11/winsxs_disk_space_usage_its_no.html)

Comment Re:Considering this is Windows... (Score 1) 471

Luckily Grandma has grandson who gets the nasty little card, puts it into the surface, mounts it into C: and sets up Grandma's surface so that she does not need to worry about it and has 32 GB or 64 GB for her documents, music, pictures and videos. - using the Libraries functionality. And the best part is, when she upgrades to a new surface or other Windows tablet, just move the card over, remount and update the Libraries location and like magic all her content is already there. Grandma never need worry about removing it.

Obviously will not work for applications, but with most data being stored on a different volume, this setup should work out fairly well. Actually, what I would like to see is a wizard for doing this. Obviously the idea here is to avoid having to remove the card.

With all that said, I am fairly curious what takes up 13GB in the RT install, that seems excessive.

Comment Re:Admittedly anecdotal (Score 1) 485

2TB NAS? Preferably one that is cloud-storage aware (or has its own clients for tablets/phones) to be broadly accessible even when not on LAN? (I guess I could settle for SkyDrive's Fetch feature, but would rather not have to go through that route).

Comment Re:Flat-Line (Score 1) 485

Even a general-purpose computing device can be sold in a configuration that by default "just plugs in and works."

We (the techies) are not incompetent to be unable to switch to a more productive environment - just that environment does not need to be in everyone's face all the time. Rather than think of this as the PC being "dumbed down," think of it as a call to action to make all the other "appliance" computers be more full-features, but without the historical complexity of PCs, before we knew how to make them easy to use.

Comment Re:I don't know if they'll even go down (Score 1) 485

Er... not quite. Yes, clustered distributed systems exist, and are growing much faster than mainframes, but there is still a lot of stuff that is done on mainframes, if only because it is a lot more convenient to have a really beefy box for that large, mission-critical multi-user database/application, without having to figure out how to partition it and without being subject to CAP.

Distributed clusters are generally better for non-real-time processing. Real-time HPC stuff is still the realm of supercomputers (not to be confused with clusters, even though both generally tend to run Linux or some other embedded POSIX OS)

Cloud

Submission + - Full Cloud Computing Adoption as Likely as seeing a Unicorn? (www.enterprisenetworkinhttp)

darthcamaro writes: Lots of hype about the cloud, but there is a new study out today that takes a very different view. Apparently ppl are more likely to see a unicorn than complete a cloud migration and are more confident in their ability to play angry birds that migrate to the cloud.

While cloud offers benefits, it also has the potential to introduce a non-trivial amount of complexity into a network administrator's job. In fact, Cisco's study found that 39 percent of respondents would rather get a root canal, dig a ditch, or do their own taxes, than deal with the challenges of public/private cloud deployment. One out of four reported they are more likely to see a UFO or Unicorn before starting and finishing an entire cloud migration in the next six months.

Comment Re:No mention in the story (Score 1) 197

And they will still pay Microsoft royalties for Android. From the B&N press release (link from TFA):

Barnes & Noble and Microsoft have settled their patent litigation, and moving forward, Barnes & Noble and Newco will have a royalty-bearing license under Microsoft’s patents for its NOOK eReader and Tablet products

Above emphasis mine.

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