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#51
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"Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
Of course they can, if the *purpose* of the comparison is to show that even a first-of-a-kind spacecraft like the shuttle isn't "two orders of magnitude" (as one poster claimed) more complex than an nth-generation airliner. The comparison is mostly meaningless because there is no metric for 'complexity', only subjective judgement. Again, don't confuse complexity of design *effort* with complexity of design *solution*. Yes, the software took a lot of care to develop, but the resulting solution was much simpler than that of a 777. Complexity of design effort directly affects costs. Just because two things are equally 'complex' in their end state, does not mean they should cost the same to develop even though the development processes were of wildly different 'complexity' levels. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. |
#52
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In article , derekl1963
@nospamyahoo.com says... Marvin wrote: Microsoft has a great sales department, second only to their legal staff. But quality control is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay down on the priority list. No longer true. QC has had a real priority for about two years. That's why Passport has pretty much been phased out and Hailstorm has vanished -- they couldn't be made to work. Also note the record of Windows 2003 Server, which is orders of magnitude better than early Windows. *Right*. That's why millions of people around the world use it on a daily basis. And smoking can't be bad for you, since so many people are smokers. It's far from perfect, but it does work, people hold it to an unrealistic standard and them complain when it fails to meet that standard. Fair enough -- we don't expect Shuttle to fly to the Moon. Let's try a realistic standard: compare it to other contemporary systems. While the Windows XP that is running on my laptop is waaaay better than Windows 3.1, it still falls short of contemporary Linux systems. With a exception of a single machine that had its network interface removed and its floppy drive expoxyed shut, no Windows machine has ever received a non-lousy Orange Book security rating, yet various Unix systems have received high evaluations. There are legitimate arguments that Windows machines are not just a hazard to their owners, but also endanger non-Windows systems since Windows-born malware can seriously disrupt the shared resource of the Internet. No other operating system has been singled out for this kind of disruption. (see http://www.newsforge.com/relocate.pl?id= 31a5092ddba1fec14d06b2e38a44232a for this argument) -- Kevin Willoughby lid Imagine that, a FROG ON-OFF switch, hardly the work for test pilots. -- Mike Collins |
#54
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In article , says...
But what users actually need (despite contrary propaganda from microsoft), is a *stable* and *predictable* and *secure* system. That's not sufficient. There are any number of stable, predictable and secure systems that are unusable by all but a handful of specially trained experts (VMS, Linux, VxWare, Multics, OS/390...). There have been other operating systems that delivered this, but they didnt have nearly the public-relations and legal-wrangling skills of microsoft, thus they got gobbled up or trampled out of business. While acquisitors are a curse to the software industry, you misunderstand why Microsoft became dominate. Part of it was marketing -- they do this quite well. Part of this the code-bloat that annoys so many people. There were any number of word-processors that let someone create a newsletter, or a book, or a Wanted-Dead or Alive poster, but MS Word was the first (and still only) word processor that let you do all of these. In the corporate world, there is a real benefit to having all your documents readable by everyone in the company. Microsoft understands and exploits this. Microsoft is an incredible business success. These days, one also has to admit that their monopoly position gives them incredible leverage. -- Kevin Willoughby lid Imagine that, a FROG ON-OFF switch, hardly the work for test pilots. -- Mike Collins |
#55
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In article ,
says... Thus, the free market in action. Nobody is forced to buy MS products. Wrong. My brother is a Linux guru, hates Windows, so his new laptop was purchased with, yes, Windows. The manufacturer can't sell him a laptop without some version of Windows on it. Several recent court actions have demonstrated that Microsoft has used its monopoly position to do coerce the purchase of MS products. -- Kevin Willoughby lid Imagine that, a FROG ON-OFF switch, hardly the work for test pilots. -- Mike Collins |
#56
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In article , "Greg D. Moore
\(Strider\)" says... "Kevin Willoughby" wrote in message ... Several recent court actions have demonstrated that Microsoft has used its monopoly position to do coerce the purchase of MS products. This is true. But on the some token, some of the best examples I've seen used of this in fact turn out to be weak. The best example of this aren't weak, but might not be easy to explain to a "jury of your peers". My favorite example: having written programs that create web sites, I used to have a least a half dozen web browsers on my office machine. Somehow, IE managed to find some way to reset the file-associations/MIME types so that IE was always the preferred browser, regardless of my efforts to the contrary. Lotus 1-2-3 for Windows never made the transition partly because they bet the farm on OS/2 and because when they did release their Windows product it sucked. I worked for startup where the CTO and VP/Engineering came from Lotus. Apparently Microsoft sold them on OS/2, claiming that OS/2 was the future and Windows-2.0 was the past. (Well, they were half-right.) 1-2- 3/OS2 was designed by Lotus' best architects, based on the 1-2-3/MS-DOS code base. 1-2-3/Windows was a complete rewrite of everything by folks who lacked experience -- second system effect? Of course, to this day, they blame Microsoft, claiming the Excel team had special access to the Windows team. Somehow, they never managed to provide hard evidence to support this claim... After that, IE became a faster, more stable product. The flip side of this: once IE has significant market-share, the "Great Browser Wars" insured that a web site that looked good in Netscape was unreadable in IE. At that point, webmasters had to either design two web sites (one for IE, one for Netscape), or add a "best viewed with IE" tag at the bottom of page... Price had nothing to do with it as many claimed No, but for the "everyone can use the Internet" audience, being pre- installed into the operating system and constantly resetting MIME- type/file-type associations was a real advantage. There's no doubt MS has taken advantage of their position. The single-sourcing OS deal I think is one of the stronger examples. These days, Windows Media Player is also a strong example. Witness the recent E.U. ruling. -- Kevin Willoughby lid Imagine that, a FROG ON-OFF switch, hardly the work for test pilots. -- Mike Collins |
#57
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In article , says...
If you allocate some memory and the code that deallocates it doesn't always get executed, it means that your logic is flawed and you haven't done the due diligence to ensure your code reflects the intentions all the time. Or it may mean a deliberate decision that 0.000001 seconds of CPU time is less valuable than hours spent by a programmer, followed up by hours and hours spent by program reviewers. Which is cheaper: a microsecond of computer time, or 24+ hours of people time? (Oddly enough, this is on-topic for sci.space. Misplaced priorities aren't limited to software engineering. Spacecraft engineers sometimes focus on launch mass or GLOW to the exclusion of other important parameters.) -- Kevin Willoughby lid Imagine that, a FROG ON-OFF switch, hardly the work for test pilots. -- Mike Collins |
#58
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On Sat, 27 Mar 2004 23:58:59 GMT, Richard Lamb wrote:
But, just for a moment, everybody take a couple of steps back, and take in the whole thing at once. This really is one awesome machine. Yeah, it would be damned hard to build one in your garage... ![]() Dale |
#59
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#60
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Richard Lamb wrote in
: But, just for a moment, everybody take a couple of steps back, and take in the whole thing at once. This really is one awesome machine. Oh, no doubt about it - I work with it every day. My point is not that the orbiter *isn't* an astonishingly complex vehicle - it surely is. My point is that airliners have *also* become astonishingly complex over the last few decades. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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