Bob Cringely's Predictions For 2005 440
An anonymous reader writes "Bob Cringley publishes his predictions for developments in the world of IT every year. His latest column contains his predictions for 2005 and a brief look back at his predictions for 2004."
Some of these predictions are -1 redundant (Score:5, Insightful)
- SPAM increases
- RIAA sues users
Even my Aunt Nellie predicted these to happen!
I'd be interested in what major software is going to take off - spam filters, chat, music?
This one too: (Score:5, Interesting)
Been predicted over and over again, but "major inroads"? Linux will grow gradually, but I can't see how he missed a glaring hole: Linux wireless support. My prediction for 2005 would have been wireless drivers for Linux that work just as easily as the built in networking drivers we have now. THEN you can start talking about major inroads, especially on laptops (which I think Linux is more suitable for than the Desktop).
Just my 2 cents.
Re:This one too: (Score:2)
As for wireless, well gee my Netgear 54G card works just great if you don't mind the odd cold lockup here and there. If anybody wants stable wireless on Linux, I suggest the Orinoco 80211.b card.
Re:This one too: (Score:2)
Re:This one too: (Score:2)
on laptop, sure.
Re:This one too: (Score:2)
Running large numbers of wires in a corporate environment is very time consuming and costly. Depending on what you need, going wireless in an all desktop environment could save a ton of money.
-B
Re:This one too: (Score:4, Informative)
You, like many people confuse the terms "wireless" with "mobile". Both terms make you think of a laptop, tablet, or car computer. Wireless means just that, no wires. Even if it sits still, it's wireless.
The new version of the bar golf video game Golden Tee is sponsored by Sprint and uses thier data network to transmit game info. The previous version dialed in with a phone line and the bar operators didn't like messing with it.
Yeah, this is my second reply. I had more to say.
Re:This one too: (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This one too: (Score:2)
It's not up to linus you know, it's damned hard to write drivers for cards you don't have specs for and these days it may even be illegal.
Re:This one too: (Score:3, Informative)
Already done. Ralink already offer Linux drivers for their 802.11 chipsets [ralinktech.com] from their official website. The last time I looked, these used the nVidia/ATI-style 'closed binary blob plus glue code' approach for their drivers, but that doesn't seem to be the case any longer.
ASUS are even declaring official 'Linux support' on the boxes of their Ralink-based cards [asus.com]. I don't know h
Re:This one too: (Score:4, Interesting)
This has always been a chicken and egg situation with hardware support for Linux. Anything that is "fringe" appears to be poorly supported - the fringe is constantly moving though. I remember a time when you had to check a little carefully when buying network cards as Linux support on some chipsets was dodgy at best. The last network card I bought came complete with a Penguin logo on the box, right next to the Windows and Mac logos (and they kindly included OpenOffice.org and Gimp on the drivers CD). Video cards and sound cards also used to be the stuff of nightmares if you had anything that wasn't quite normal. These days they all just work with most modern distros.
So yes, for now wireless support is a little lacking, but as more people use Linux, and hence more people are interested in wireless support for Linux you'll see more kernel hackers writing drivers and more support from wireless manufacturers resulting in pretty broad, reliable wireless support on Linux.
Linux inroads to the desktop do have to come first though. Without desktop Linux making greater inroads there simply won't be enough demand for Linux wireless support to ensure it gets the kind of attention it needs. The desktop is coming, slowly, and I think Cringely is right, this year will see significant inroads - not a revolution, not even much of a dent in total marketshare, mostly just a change in perception of Linux into something that is viable on average desktops.
Have patience. While progress has been a little slow at times, the one thing is has been is steady. Sit back and look at Desktop Linux from 5 or 6 years ago. Try loading up a system with Redhat 6 (or even worse Redhat 5 or older). Things have actually come a remarkably long way in a relatively short time.
Jedidiah.
Re:This one too: (Score:4, Interesting)
I was cleaning my room earlier this month and stumbled upon a pack of 5.25" floppies with data that goes back a WAY. Naturally, I wanted to see what was on the disks (and back them up on an almost as-ancient DDS device or CDRW). To my amazement, Windows XP refused to recognise the 5.25" half-height floppy OR the full-height 360K floppy. No such problems with Linux. Got an IBM PS/2 built around MCA bus and a SCSI or ESDI disk? Good luck with anything out of Redmond newer than WFW 3.11. And yet no problems with Linux - which has support for Microchannel, ESDI AND the quirky ESDI behavior found on my now-gone m55. I suppose I won't have to mention an old MFM drive OR non-IDE non-SCSI CD-ROM (yes, I needed a CDROM in a machine and this is all I had, rofl) - Linux 1, Windows 0. You don't even need to deal with obsolete or odd equipment to see that Linux kicks Windows where it hurts when it comes to hardware support. I have a PCI Adaptec UltraWide differential SCSI adapter that has NEVER worked under Windows XP. Never. Well, let me restate that. Windows refused to recognise the device most of the time. When it DID recognise it, it displayed the little exclamation sign next to the device name MOST of the time... and when it didn't, I received bluescreen STOP errors after light usage. NEVER had that problem with Linux. In fact, when I updated my PowerMac clone, I moved the adapter AND the 20Gb disk out of my Athlon machine, and it has no problems working with Linux
Re:Different issue (Score:5, Interesting)
There are a lot easier ways of doing this than hacking WiFi cards, such as buying $20 worth of parts from Radio Shack.
Transmitting on a certain frequency isn't as easy as sending a command to the hardware "transmit these bits on frequency X". The hardware only has a limited range of frequencies it can transmit on, and the antenna has to be matched to the frequency as well. Police, fire, etc use VHF (150MHz-ish), UHF (400MHz-ish), and 800MHz bands. Getting a 2.4GHz radio down to those frequencies may be possible but it would be a whole lot more work than building a radio from scratch. And at 200mW of transmit power, you're going to cause interference for what, a whole block and a half? I think not.
The reason hardware vendors don't want to release the source code is they (rightly or wrongly) think that with the source code, their chip can be reverse engineered and some fly-by-night company is going to copycat their product and cause them to lose sales. Same reason Nvidia and ATI only release binary drivers for their video cards.
Re:Different issue (Score:5, Informative)
I can't say that I disagree with you, but I think the reason behind Nvidia or Ati not releasing is not just the fear of reverse engineering. They both have a lot innovation and expertise there. 3D drivers are a bit more complex than just simple wireless nic hw interfaces. Nvidia improving performance by mere driver upgrades by tens of percents on occasions is something they sure as hell don't want Ati to know the details about.
I don't the linux market for 3D cards has jack to do with it either. They both most likely have the almost exact code in their windows drivers and that's the source they don't to release.
Re:Different issue (Score:3, Informative)
But that doesn't mean you shouldn't hold the vendors accountable; if they feel enough pressure, one can hope
Lappy Linux (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, I can envision all sorts of tablet devices running Linux. LinuxPADD, anyone?
Re:This one too: (Score:4, Insightful)
If you want a revolution, you need revolutionary technologies. A non WIMP interface, a port of KDE/Gnome/X to true 3D, an integrated office productivity application (word processing/spreadsheet/presentation/mind map/project management), an integrated communications applications (web/mail/IM/usenet/wiki/blog). Something that would make every CIO go "Wow! I want 10000 of these!". Working on better Outlook/Winamp clones would help only marginally. Do it if you want, but I don't see a point in switching when Windows has better GUI applications and Windows itself is good enough.
Re:This one too: (Score:4, Insightful)
The more competition there is the better off we all (consumers) are. The only reason linux has not taken off is because microsoft has exsclusivity contracts in place with all of the major vendors.
"So why are all those man hours being wasted to create competeing products?"
Don't know to much about software development do you ? There is no "one way" to do things. Different people have different ideas about how things should be managed or written. You seem to think that everybody thinks the same, or has the same goals. Or that they should. I couldnt disagree with you more about that.
"you disagree with the descion voice your opinion, but swollow your pride and dont fork the project as that will only dilute the power of linux."
Dude the power of linux and OSS is being able to fork it if you disagree with the direction it is heading in. Why the heck do you think people are leaving windows ? Or unix ? They disagreed with the way things were going, or they agreed more with the way things were going with linux.
Windows got where it was by competing with mac, whats going on in the linux community is not the same since there is far far more cooperation than people see, but the principle is the same. Competition drives innovation.
If Linux wants to surpass windows two things need to happen:
1. Stop trying to copy windows. Go your own route. If people want windows they will use windows.
2. Get a major PC manufacturer to install linux by default on their retail desktops.
The problem is two-fold, the first major problem is a lot of the newer developers are windows developers who feel like making linux more like windows. The second problem is microsofts bully tactics (which are illegal).
How to get past these issue's is an exercise I leave to the reader.
Re:Some of these predictions are -1 redundant (Score:5, Insightful)
Perfect for Idea Futures Exchange (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Perfect for Idea Futures Exchange (Score:2)
By all means, do you have any predictions for 2005. I find your posts interesting. Got anything to contribute this time around? ;)
Now if I can only shave... (Score:2)
The Second Coming of Timothy McVeigh might not happen but then if I can match Cringley's stellar record, who gives a shit?
Re:Perfect for Idea Futures Exchange (Score:2, Interesting)
Or maybe because there's no kind of real incentive to? If all he wanted was masturbatory 'propz' from a 'community' of strangers he will never meet, he'd open up a slashdot account and spell microsoft 'micro$oft'.
Cringley doesn't waste time on ideasphere not because he has nothing to say, but rather because he's an accomplished professional who is highly regarded in his field.
Re:Perfect for Idea Futures Exchange (Score:2)
grandparent its not SPAM (Score:2)
Who's Bob Cringely anyway? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Who's Bob Cringely anyway? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Who's Bob Cringely anyway? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Who's Bob Cringely anyway? (Score:2)
Duh... (Score:5, Funny)
What does Microsoft do that ISN'T a disaster for its users?
I like the ergonomic keyboard (Score:5, Funny)
I use one on my Linux box. It works great.
I don't have carpel tunnel now.
I just want to give credit where credit is due.
Someone will probably post that they didn't design it.
It is still a good keyboard.
Re:I like the ergonomic keyboard (Score:2)
but with even those they have managed to fuck up the support(have to go through hoops to enable force feedback on ms ff pro 1 in win2k/xp - because they just didn't want to support it to sell their next pretty much identical stick).
Re:I like the ergonomic keyboard (Score:4, Informative)
They hired Ziba [cdf.org] to do that.
Re:Duh... (Score:2)
Re:Duh... (Score:2)
That, and I'd really love to see a stand-alone copy of their Solitare and Free Cell. For *ix. That would be cool.
Re:Duh... (Score:5, Insightful)
Credit: IMB PC/AT and it's clones
YOUR CLAIM: Give them a platform that is virtually universal in the industry.
Credit: uhm...yeah... I've got 5 diffrent platforms here on 5 diffrent processors (only 1 machine is a x86)
YOUR CLAIM: Make computing easy
Credit: Those boys over at Apple
YOUR CLAIM: Make computing cheap via making it everywhere and driving down the cost of hardware.
Credit: All the makers of PC clones
YOUR CLAIM: Managing to get on the internet truck late and yet still be the driving force that brought it to home users via making it so easy to get on and use.
Credit: They didn't get on late, but AOL did all this.
Re:Duh... (Score:5, Informative)
This was bound to happen anyway, and was more a factor of hardware getting faster, more capable, and cheaper.
Microsoft's software hasn't got any cheaper, while PC's have. It's been the driving down of the TCO which has brought PC's into the average home. Microsoft was around back when I bought my first XT clone (with no modem, networking, or even a hard drive, and only CGA graphics) for about $2500 (CDN) -- and this was at a time when Compaq was releasing their first 80386-based machine. Now you can get machines that absolutely nuke this machine out of the water for $500 or less. They do more and cost less. No amount of software wizardry would have brought the PC to everyone's home if the hardware hadn't advanced as well as it has, and if not for for Internet and audio and video improvements.
There is no definnable benefit to this. Besides which, it's quite likely that without Microsoft Windows, the PC would have mostly consolodated around OS/2 a long, long time ago.
When? Sorry, but that title goes to Apple, which made computing easy 11 years before Microsoft even started to get close.
They did no such thing. Business demand for faster spreadsheet processing was the initial impetus. Hardware costs were being driven down for decades before Microsoft ever came along. Just look at the simple calculator, and what one would have cost you in the late 60's versus now.
No, IBM's OS/2 WARP v3 beat them to that title a year before Windows 95 was released. It had a built-in web browser, e-mail client, news reader, gopher client, decent telnet client (something the base Windows distros still don't have...) and other useful Internet tools. When Windows 95 was released in August of 1995, it didn't even have a decent web browser.
Sorry, but Microsoft didn't so any of the things you've claimed, and all of them would have happened without Microsoft. It's called "progress", and it would have driven on ahead with or without Microsoft. If anything, Microsoft has stifled tech growth through their monopolistic practices. Operating systems like Mac OS X show us where we all could be if there wasn't a single dominant software company running the show.
Yaz.
Crossing Over (Score:5, Insightful)
"I wrote that spam would get worse"
"Microsoft would propose proprietary technologies"
"Apple will take a big risk in 2005...though I am at a loss right now for what that might be."
Well at least he goes out on a limb and his predictions aren't vague or anything. If John Edward stops hosting Crossing Over, I know where they can get a new host.
Re:Crossing Over (Score:5, Informative)
Like this?
If he was predicting the passage of the CAN-SPAM act in his first column of 2004, then it would have been pretty funny if he couldn't have been specific. It had alread passed.
It took effect on January 1, 2004.
Re:Crossing Over (Score:5, Funny)
Bah, if this were an Infocom game or Hack, we would have got a message like "You cast CAN-SPAM. You feel sad for a moment, but then it passes."
Crossing Over Must Die (Score:5, Funny)
Please God -- let there never be another John Edward.
Crossing Over must die, and never again be channeled to the living!
-kgj
Re:Crossing Over Must Die (Score:2)
Someone whose name begins with "S" tells me that you feel that you're a skeptical person. She tells me that... wait... that you're feeling some anger right now. I'm seeing the colour "blue". Does that mean anything to you?
Re:Crossing Over Must Die (Score:3, Informative)
John Edward IS the Biggest Douche in The Universe! [tvtome.com]
And if the boys from South Park aren't authoritative enough for you, Penn & Teller say the same thing
Re:Crossing Over (Score:2)
Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mark (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft certainly has a head start in heuristically detecting things (after all, they're the only people who know what all the random gibberish in the registry means, or whether mswin03.dll really belongs in 2003 server's windows directory), but I suspect that their heuristics are only going to get them so far, and that the people who wrote spyware that worked so hard to keep the other players from finding it are going to figure out how MS found them and "fix" it.
Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar (Score:5, Interesting)
This is where the majority of the "Wow, I found spyware!" factor comes from.
It also makes a bigger deal out of wiping files after the spyware has been nuked. AdAware and SpyBot leave the odd DLL, the odd this, the odd that lying about from time to time. The spyware is gone (It neither runs nor is capable of running) but Giant will claim this as an infection and bitch at the user that they have SPYWARE, when in fact they have an unusable dll stub in their windows directory.
Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar (Score:3, Interesting)
The thing that makes me sad is that I kind of like finding spyware on my system, just to make me feel like I'm a kind of savvy Internet user who does what she can to protect her computer, and the much-vaunted Microsoft adware utility didn't give me any satisfaction at all.
What? (Score:4, Interesting)
Wait a second, just hold everything... Microsoft release buggy, flawed software in a hurry to get the first to market advantage, and then the unscrupulous use those flaws to hijack the computers of hundreds of thousands world wide... then Microsoft PURCHASES THIRD PARTY SOFTWARE to apply band aids to their seeping wounds?
Maybe I'm going mad here, but since they wrote the damned OS in the first place, wouldn't they know best where to apply system patches etc., and wouldn't it be better and faster to get the people that originally developed the OS to fix it up?
But why would they when they can actually charge people for their patches now? Sure its free for now, but not for long, as the EULA states. Not to mention their OS authentication services (which you can turn off, if you buy that line), which their patches ostensibly never mentioned.
I can't speak for anyone else, but I know when someone is trying to pass off horse manure as honey...
Re:What? (Score:2)
"They" is a very difficult term to deal with. "They" are likely hundreds, if not a thousand or more, developers, working on more subsystems than most people may want to admit. Maybe even more than MS would want to admit.
Getting a small team of 15-20 developers together who know enough about all of these areas is basically impossible. Even getting together a team of 15-20 developers together who can then go to all the subsystems to find out what is required - honestly, that's not even close to trivial.
Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar (Score:4, Interesting)
Well that was a waste of time (Score:5, Funny)
I could have just easily said that in north east america, the year will start out cold, get warmer, get hot, get cold, and then finally get really cold. I just wish advertisers would pay me for that.
Re:Well that was a waste of time (Score:3, Interesting)
I myself just decided to really give Skype a second look - and things are really looking up as far as PC/real phone combos go.
Re:Well that was a waste of time (Score:2)
Do you want it correct or over-the-top? (Score:2)
Do you want accurate predictions or fantasy?
Here's my easy prediction: Aliens will land from Alpha-centari, buy Apple, release a new L-Mac that comes with Linux pre-installed, and it'll put Microsoft out of business. Tune in in twelve months to see how right I was.
Bob Cringley, on the other hand, will be right 75-80% of the time (and I hope he is on his loss-leader Mac product pred
Re:Do you want it correct or over-the-top? (Score:3, Funny)
L-Mac? Apple already makes the *nix-Mac. (Score:2)
They are all going to go out and buy Macs because 1) they have decided that Macs are cool, 2) that Macs are BSD under the hood means it runs all of their stuff, and they prefer BSD to Linux given the choice, 3) they have funds to pay for it and always wanted a Mac anyway.
My prediction for 2005 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:My prediction for 2005 (Score:2)
It's also because he almost always throws in a couple of fanatical anti-Microsoft rants.
Re:My prediction for 2005 (Score:2)
Affiliate programs (Score:5, Interesting)
4) The Recording Industries Association of America will continue to sue customers while their business slowly dissolves. The big threat here isn't file swapping, but affiliate programs like Apple's iTunes Affiliate Program that I am sure will be shortly copied by all the online music stores. These affiliate programs turn bloggers into shills and blogs into record stores, with the result that record company's last source of power -- marketing clout -- is taken away. This will take time, but it is the beginning of the end for old-style record companies.
I didn't realize iTunes had an affiliate program, but it seems like a logical step. Amazon's been doing this for a long time with music CDs, of course, as have other vendors. While viral marketing is definitely a good way to promote things, I don't see it reducing the record companies' marketing clout. I've posted before about how they used viral marketing to promote Christina Aguilera [bebeyond.com] when she was new. This is just another marketing avenue for them. But really, you still need to reach people who don't read blogs. People still watch TV. Still listen to the radio. Still read magazines and newspapers.
EricWhy is William Shatner's face on my All-Bran? [ericgiguere.com]
Re:Affiliate programs (Score:2)
Re:Affiliate programs (Score:3, Insightful)
I have made about $7.35 from the affiliate program so far.
The cool thing is, it doesn't just apply to songs. One day I will luck up and someone will buy an iPod or iMac in the same order - you get 2% off that as well if they buy with 48 hours of clicking on your link.
Each editorial that I post on my website [jackwhispers.com], I post a corresponding song.
For instance: My last story was on Bleu Rose Software exitin
eh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:eh? (Score:2)
Because he needs to pat himself on the back for pointing out that software eventually lose support because an estimated 14 of the original 400,000 customers still use it.
What troubles me is the call for upgrades. If the software does what you need it to do why do you need an upgrade? And if, by the time your software loses the support of the publisher , you still do not have it working right you deserve to get the beat down.
VOIP: (Score:5, Interesting)
Expect some big hobbling of VOIP, at least for John. Q. Public.
Re:VOIP: (Score:2)
Re:VOIP: (Score:2)
C'mon Bob, give some examples (Score:4, Insightful)
We've all grown accustomed to Bob's vagueness in these predictions, but here he doesn't even list any examples to support the veracity of his already vague (and super-obvious) prediction. -Joe
Giant Antispyware (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1743742,00.as p [eweek.com]
making predictions is hard... (Score:3, Interesting)
Worthless punting by Cringely - obvious predictions about obvious things, useless predictions about useless things. Just like a "Best of year X", everybody needs to do a "Predictions for year X+1" - and Cringely's predictions are as good as anyone else's (i.e. worthless).
Re:making predictions is hard... (Score:5, Insightful)
Except, of course, that they aren't - they're just obvious. Actually they're only obvious to those already informed and following developments in the industry. What makes them usefull is the fact that Cringly has exposure outside of the industry and, therefor, significantly more influence upon the mindshare of the general population. Something I can't (and assume you can't) claim.
Sex Symbol? (Score:3, Funny)
My prediction is that the accuracy of his predic- (Score:2)
Seriously, though, 73% is a pretty poor prediction accuracy. Think about it, if you predicted outcomes of events at random as binary answers, you'd get 50% "accuracy".
Re:My prediction is that the accuracy of his predi (Score:2)
you forgot one prediction (Score:2)
A $249 Mac? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A $249 Mac? (Score:2)
Re: A $249 Mac? (Score:4, Interesting)
We might see that as early as next week with the rumored introduction of an el-cheapo Mac without a display. The price for that box is supposed to be $499, which would give customers a box with processor, disk, memory, and OS into which you plug your current display, keyboard, and mouse. Given that this sounds a lot like AMD's new Personal Internet Communicator, which will sell for $185, there is probably plenty of profit left for Apple in a $499 price. But what if they priced it at $399 or even $349? Now make it $249, where I calculate they'd be losing $100 per unit. At $100 per unit, how many little Macs could they sell if Jobs is willing to spend $1 billion? TEN MILLION and Apple suddenly becomes the world's number one PC company. Think of it as a non-mobile iPod with computing capability. Think of the music sales it could spawn. Think of the iPod sales it would hurt (zero, because of the lack of mobility). Think of the more expensive Mac sales it would hurt (zero, because a Mac loyalist would only be interested in using this box as an EXTRA computer they would otherwise not have bought). Think of the extra application sales it would generate and especially the OS upgrade sales, which alone could pay back that $100. Think of the impact it would have on Windows sales (minus 10 million units). And if it doesn't work, Steve will still have $5 billion in cash with no measurable negative impact on the company. I think he'll do it.
I found this prediction to be the most interesting, and maybe the closest to going out on a limb that Cringely gets. It also sounds like wishful thinking, like Cringely is trying to talk Jobs into it by convincing him this would be a smart move.
I can't see that Jobs would be willing to lose money on this venture, even if it is a smart move. It's more likely that maybe it would start out at $499 and then slowly drop in price over time.
Re: A $249 Mac? (Score:3, Interesting)
I remember hearing during the boom days that Apple was looking for someone to acquire or merge with but there wasn't any companies interested in any meaningful way, which isn't too surprising considering what a niche market Apple is in, the trick is that niche happens be a fairly well paying one. Apple gets to sell hardware at comfortable profit margins
Re: A $249 Mac? (Score:3, Interesting)
With an elegant plastic and brushed aluminum case, a simple GUI that Apple's known for, and a bright glowing Macintosh logo (how Chic!) a
Linspire (Score:2)
Linspire is grabage, worse than pure M$.
With it's glaring security failures and it running already flakey M$ apps, it's doomed to fail. I hope Linspire goes the way of the Dodo and soon. I know people who tried it and were so turned off by that they said they will never again even consider trying any other Linux distro. It's such a poor product that the company should be sued and the big shots do the perp walk..
What MS apps? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've really got to give Michael Roberts a lot of credit for his attempt to get the average user away from the grips of Microsoft, spam, viruses and malware. When my son's P4 HP Pavilion ground to a halt with malware, I loaned him an old PII-266 running Linspire 4.5 while I roto-rootered his Windows machine. He and his wife were able to start using it for surfing and e-mail with about 2 minutes training. It worked just fine with winmodem for dialup access, too. Now I'm having trouble getting it back from him.
I'm currently running SuSE 9.2 myself and have experience with RedHat, Fedora, Mandrake, Knoppix and Xandros as well as Linspire. No Linspire doesn't have as much geek appeal, but it's a reasonably good product IMHO. Oh, and no, I have no affiliation with Linspire [linspire.com] in any way other than as someone who's tried it.
"Do the Right Thing. It will gratify some people and astound the rest." - Mark Twain
Nothing about nanotech gray goo?!? (Score:3, Funny)
Pshwew!
My prediction (Score:2, Insightful)
Tool me once.. shame on you (Score:2)
I said Apple wouldn't introduce a G6 in 2004 (right) and wouldn't sell as many G5s as it would like, either (right again).
Well im sure apple would have *like* to sell 50 G5 macs to every man, woman, child, and house pet on planet earth... Its easy to be right when you leave yourself an ocean to drown in there Bobbo.
1-900-ASK-BOBC (Score:2)
--Gee, why haven't more people noticed this trend!?
Carrying over from last year, I predict that Burst.com will beat Microsoft in their current lawsuit...Microsoft DID violate their patents, DID violate Burst's non-disclosure agreement, DID attempt to illegally put them out of business, and DID attempt to control
2005 prediction: cringely still won't get his ph.d (Score:5, Informative)
I For one.... (Score:3, Funny)
My predictions from last year (Score:3, Interesting)
# ipod and mini ipod will be hit by a wave of cheap replacements that both allow you to store/play music AND video. These will integrate with mobile phones (2G).
Well, there were loads of attempts to replace the ipod, and many had colour screens and video. However the integration with the mobile phone was only half hearted and virtually all failed to beat Apple on the sexiness front. Its strange really, the ipod ISN'T that great to use, but it has an x factor where the others don't. And others development methodologies seem to be unable to work in the right way to replicate what should be easy.
# Multi processor machines will begin to take off in the business environment. Single user, multi machine setups will smooth the rollout of Linux/OpenOffice and make people more productive.
Maybe not 2004, but the rise of the dual core and virtualisation as the way forward during this year has laid the groundwork. So in one sense it was a win since the future IS away from the single core. Nobody was there to do the obvious; place a dual processor box on the desktop for those that wanted to be ahead of the game.
# Appliances that take advantage of home broadband links and WiFi will take off.
Surprisingly little has come out in this domain, certainly in the mainstream. Market penetration is there, but not the new devices.
# Microsoft will get scared, and will run towards early launch of XBox 2 as a home machine. Failure will spell the fall of Microsoft.
I think microsoft ARE scared, and they will be launching the XBox2 earlier than the PS3, but they are still too slow to catch the wave. Given the horribly late delivery of Longhorn, with much less in the way of capability than promised - I do think we have seen the beginning of the fall of the house of Microsoft.
# The Apple House will be unveiled
Nope, Apple still think they are a computer company, rather than a consumer electronics company. The door which was open to them is slowly closing. Once someone works out how to replicate their design wins, they are toast. Very poor strategy choices from Jobs here.
What are the lessons? Well, its obvious that the industry has significantly slowed down. People aren't moving far or fast to develop new markets. The bean counters and marketing geeks are looking backward at what was, not at what could be. Ordinarily this would be a time of great opportunity, a time when those with a vision could create new startups and have the time to build big enough businesses. However with the extent and misuse of patents, large companies can sit on such innovation to the detriment of the market as a whole. That creates a degree of pent up tension in the market that has to resolve eventually. Will we see it in 2005? Probably not, but the offensive use of patents, coupled with lazy bean counting approaches to commerce will become a festering issue.
What will we see then?
The open source community will start to switch from reproduction of existing elements, to creation of new solutions, possibly involving hardware. The time is right for those with vision to tie up with those with skills to create new markets - it just needs an instigator.
Outsourcing is winning many new business friends, but as is usual with these director types, the distance and lack of control threatens their position ("what value are you really adding"). Therefore expect the multinationals to attempt to create greater levers of control into the outsourced functions - which will go down like a lead balloon with China.
China will come out with a DRM free, cheap, HDTV compatible replacement for BluRay and HD DVD. It will be a low cost addon to existing cheap DVD players. Movie companies will hate it, but the world isn't as it once was. Coupled with cracking of the protection around the new forma
Just because you want it to happen... (Score:4, Interesting)
Just because you want it to happen doesn't mean it's going to happen. Bob Cringely seems to quite often second guess major industry players and try to predict what they're going to do, but let me just ask you this one question:
Has Apple ever sold a computer and taken a loss on it?
Also, if Apple were to sell 10 million of these things, that's a $1 billion loss, but what if people love the cheap price and they "accidentally" sell 50 million of them? That's a $5 billion loss and now he's almost bankrupted the company. Of course, they could make it up on iPod sales, but they can't run the company on only iPod sales profits.
Good article, BTW.
I just had a great idea (Score:3, Interesting)
VOIP unlimited calling plan: $19.99/mo
2-phone cell plan with unlimited mobile-to-mobile minutes: $49.99/mo
Connect one cell to your computer and leave it at home; take the other with you. Use PBX software to rig up a bridge between your VOIP and the home cell. Use the home cell as a gateway between your roaming cell and the VOIP number, abusing the free mobile-to-mobile minutes.
Poof! Unlimited cellular anytime minutes to/from anywhere in the US, and low VOIP rates on all your international calls, for $69.98 per month. If you're a heavy user of anytime minutes or international calls, the savings could add up very fast. At least until the phone company figures out what you are doing...
Apple's market share (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd personally like to see this happen. I was at the local Apple store this weekend looking at Power Macs. I thought overnight about making a purchase (one just doesn't make impulse buys at $3000), and ultimately decided against buying one.
My reasons pretty much came down to: I didn't think it was a good value. I mean, I've paid less for a car!
I'm still interested in buying one, but maybe I'll look on eBay or buy one of their refurb models. I like the idea of a *nix system that has a GUI that actually works (sorry X.11, but I've never liked you).
Chip H.
Re:Apple G6 (Score:5, Informative)
what is he talking about?
He was probably remembering the old IBM PowerPC roadmap from 2001 [geek.com] which clearly discusses the G3, the G4, the G5, the G6, and makes fuzzies about the G7.
He was probably talking about THAT G6. The one that was due in 2003 (DOH!).
cheers,
RS
Other Apple predictions (Score:3, Funny)
- Apple will patent colors, making beelions on royalties
- Jobs distortion field will become reality, and vice-versa
- Apple will finally buy apple records and be done with it
- '05 will be the year of the G5 and '06 the year of the G6. As a consequence of the distortion field, this century will be known as the G century.
Never (Score:2)
Re:05: Stupid fucks will continue to do stupid thi (Score:3, Funny)