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#41
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"Chris Hornbeck" wrote ...
Xerox PARC was the home of GUI's and mousing, etc. Kind of apocryphal in the Apple canon. And later stolen by everybody else. Somewhere around here I have a very old copy of a Scientific American magazine with an article on the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). It showed all the things we now take for granted, overlapping, resizable windows, use of a mouse and cursor, etc. etc. In the back of the same magazine is a small 1-column ad with a picture of the "Apple-1" PC board likely taken in Steve Jobs' garage. Apple and MS both derived the idea of windows from Xerox. That is why Apple's suit against MS for "stealing windows" was a big steaming crock, and the courts agreed. |
#42
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Richard Crowley wrote:
Somewhere around here I have a very old copy of a Scientific American magazine with an article on the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). It showed all the things we now take for granted, overlapping, resizable windows, use of a mouse and cursor, etc. etc. In the back of the same magazine is a small 1-column ad with a picture of the "Apple-1" PC board likely taken in Steve Jobs' garage. Apple and MS both derived the idea of windows from Xerox. That is why Apple's suit against MS for "stealing windows" was a big steaming crock, and the courts agreed. Yes, but Apple paid licensing to Xerox for the use of the concept, and Microsoft did not. That said, my department had a Xerox Star in college, and I thought the whole GUI notion was a lousy one. Much more cumbersome than a command line. But then, I still think so. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#43
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Richard Crowley wrote:
Somewhere around here I have a very old copy of a Scientific American magazine with an article on the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). It showed all the things we now take for granted, overlapping, resizable windows, use of a mouse and cursor, etc. etc. In the back of the same magazine is a small 1-column ad with a picture of the "Apple-1" PC board likely taken in Steve Jobs' garage. Apple and MS both derived the idea of windows from Xerox. That is why Apple's suit against MS for "stealing windows" was a big steaming crock, and the courts agreed. Yes, but Apple paid licensing to Xerox for the use of the concept, and Microsoft did not. That said, my department had a Xerox Star in college, and I thought the whole GUI notion was a lousy one. Much more cumbersome than a command line. But then, I still think so. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#44
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![]() I hate the concept of stadiums changing their name just to get it heard on TV for advertisement purposes. Just like I hate Nascar drivers spouting off sponsers when they should be happy about a win and talking about that instead. What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. -- -Hev find me he www.michaelspringer.com |
#45
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![]() I hate the concept of stadiums changing their name just to get it heard on TV for advertisement purposes. Just like I hate Nascar drivers spouting off sponsers when they should be happy about a win and talking about that instead. What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. -- -Hev find me he www.michaelspringer.com |
#46
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Richard Crowley wrote: ....Apple and MS both derived the idea of windows from Xerox. That is why Apple's suit against MS for "stealing windows" was a big steaming crock, and the courts agreed. Yes, but Apple paid licensing to Xerox for the use of the concept, and Microsoft did not. In which case Apple had no legal standing. It should have been Xerox vs. MS. OTOH, their "acquisition" of DOS from Digital Research was no less questionable. Bringing the topic around, some companies are much more marketing organizations than technical ones. Monster and Microsoft come to mind, but at least Microsoft does more of their own work these days. Does Monster have *any* real technological innovations to its name? "Bigger wire is better" doesn't really seem like a huge technology accomplishment. But then where I work we put several hundred million transistors on a chip the size of your thumbnail, so I may have a jaded perspective? And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". Apparently there is a loyal (although dwindling) segment of customers that go along with that scheme. That said, my department had a Xerox Star in college, and I thought the whole GUI notion was a lousy one. Much more cumbersome than a command line. But then, I still think so. Indeed. I am just adding the "after-the-fact" features that the customers (VPs) want on my web-based project (approaching 10,000 lines of code). But there are some things for which GUIs are either awkward or just not capable of doing. |
#47
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Richard Crowley wrote: ....Apple and MS both derived the idea of windows from Xerox. That is why Apple's suit against MS for "stealing windows" was a big steaming crock, and the courts agreed. Yes, but Apple paid licensing to Xerox for the use of the concept, and Microsoft did not. In which case Apple had no legal standing. It should have been Xerox vs. MS. OTOH, their "acquisition" of DOS from Digital Research was no less questionable. Bringing the topic around, some companies are much more marketing organizations than technical ones. Monster and Microsoft come to mind, but at least Microsoft does more of their own work these days. Does Monster have *any* real technological innovations to its name? "Bigger wire is better" doesn't really seem like a huge technology accomplishment. But then where I work we put several hundred million transistors on a chip the size of your thumbnail, so I may have a jaded perspective? And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". Apparently there is a loyal (although dwindling) segment of customers that go along with that scheme. That said, my department had a Xerox Star in college, and I thought the whole GUI notion was a lousy one. Much more cumbersome than a command line. But then, I still think so. Indeed. I am just adding the "after-the-fact" features that the customers (VPs) want on my web-based project (approaching 10,000 lines of code). But there are some things for which GUIs are either awkward or just not capable of doing. |
#48
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Hev wrote:
What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. It's already happened; dig that Suzuki guy. g -- ha |
#49
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Hev wrote:
What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. It's already happened; dig that Suzuki guy. g -- ha |
#50
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Richard Crowley wrote:
In which case Apple had no legal standing. It should have been Xerox vs. MS. OTOH, their "acquisition" of DOS from Digital Research was no less questionable. Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. As for the PARC GUI, Apple really took it and ran with it, after which Moft just tried to copy it. Maybe the RIAA should have been a witness. |
#51
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Richard Crowley wrote:
In which case Apple had no legal standing. It should have been Xerox vs. MS. OTOH, their "acquisition" of DOS from Digital Research was no less questionable. Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. As for the PARC GUI, Apple really took it and ran with it, after which Moft just tried to copy it. Maybe the RIAA should have been a witness. |
#52
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"hank alrich" wrote in message
. .. Hev wrote: What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. It's already happened; dig that Suzuki guy. g -- g -- -Hev find me he www.michaelspringer.com |
#53
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"hank alrich" wrote in message
. .. Hev wrote: What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. It's already happened; dig that Suzuki guy. g -- g -- -Hev find me he www.michaelspringer.com |
#54
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"S O'Neill" wrote ...
Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. |
#55
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"S O'Neill" wrote ...
Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. |
#56
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Hev wrote:
I hate the concept of stadiums changing their name just to get it heard on TV for advertisement purposes. Just like I hate Nascar drivers spouting off sponsers when they should be happy about a win and talking about that instead. What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. Too late, my names have been for sale for years. $1 million each, or $3 million for both. So far no one has bought one, so you could be the first. |
#57
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Hev wrote:
I hate the concept of stadiums changing their name just to get it heard on TV for advertisement purposes. Just like I hate Nascar drivers spouting off sponsers when they should be happy about a win and talking about that instead. What is next? Players changing their names to 'Post It Smith' or 'Dave Honda' or 'Neuman Shure'. Ok, I'll stop now. But get the point? F-in sick. Watch, it will happen. Too late, my names have been for sale for years. $1 million each, or $3 million for both. So far no one has bought one, so you could be the first. |
#58
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"S O'Neill" wrote ... Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. Of course, DR was CP/M, the OS of the day, so everyone was a DR dealer. And QDOS sure was a lot like CPM (as was MS-DOS); it was basically the same thing ported to Intel's new terminal controller chip (8088 in "maximum mode"). |
#59
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"S O'Neill" wrote ... Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. Of course, DR was CP/M, the OS of the day, so everyone was a DR dealer. And QDOS sure was a lot like CPM (as was MS-DOS); it was basically the same thing ported to Intel's new terminal controller chip (8088 in "maximum mode"). |
#60
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"S O'Neill" wrote ... Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. DRDOS came _after_ MS-DOS. Q-DOS was in fact a poor imitation of DR's CP/M, done by someone who did not really understand why CP/M 2.2 did some of the things that it did. But for that matter, most of the CP/M user interface was cribbed from DEC's RT-11, including even things like the PIP command and the SYSGEN procedure. When the IBM PC came out, you could get MS-DOS for a minimal cost, or CP/M-86 for a substantial amount. MS-DOS took over the market, although it took a few years to do so. (You could also opt to use neither one and run only BASIC in ROM with the cassette port, something people don't seem to remember much about the original IBM PC these days). Only after there was a sizeable installed base for MS-DOS and the revenues for CP/M were tanking did DR come out with DR DOS. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#61
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"S O'Neill" wrote ... Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. DRDOS came _after_ MS-DOS. Q-DOS was in fact a poor imitation of DR's CP/M, done by someone who did not really understand why CP/M 2.2 did some of the things that it did. But for that matter, most of the CP/M user interface was cribbed from DEC's RT-11, including even things like the PIP command and the SYSGEN procedure. When the IBM PC came out, you could get MS-DOS for a minimal cost, or CP/M-86 for a substantial amount. MS-DOS took over the market, although it took a few years to do so. (You could also opt to use neither one and run only BASIC in ROM with the cassette port, something people don't seem to remember much about the original IBM PC these days). Only after there was a sizeable installed base for MS-DOS and the revenues for CP/M were tanking did DR come out with DR DOS. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#62
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Richard Crowley wrote:
And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/36120.html -- ha |
#63
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Richard Crowley wrote:
And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/36120.html -- ha |
#64
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"hank alrich" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/36120.html Flawed logic. Incomplete data. The feedback at the bottom of their page doesn't agree with the editorial any more than I do. They don't even discuss the concept of DIY PCs where you can pick and choose components, and upgrade only the ones you need instead of buying a complete new computer. IMHO that is the great difference between the Mac concept and open-standard PC. I would think that an article in a Linux forum (of all places!) would comprehend open standards better than that? Apple has used all means possible to ensure that they have no competition to either their hardware or software products. That is not an admirable business concept IMHO. YMMV. |
#65
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"hank alrich" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/36120.html Flawed logic. Incomplete data. The feedback at the bottom of their page doesn't agree with the editorial any more than I do. They don't even discuss the concept of DIY PCs where you can pick and choose components, and upgrade only the ones you need instead of buying a complete new computer. IMHO that is the great difference between the Mac concept and open-standard PC. I would think that an article in a Linux forum (of all places!) would comprehend open standards better than that? Apple has used all means possible to ensure that they have no competition to either their hardware or software products. That is not an admirable business concept IMHO. YMMV. |
#66
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Richard Crowley wrote: "S O'Neill" wrote ... Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. DRDOS came _after_ MS-DOS. Bzzzzt! Yes, of course, I meant CP/M. I was elected VP of the CP/M Users Group Northwest 20 years ago and my poor memory is troubling. :-( Q-DOS was in fact a poor imitation of DR's CP/M, done by someone who did not really understand why CP/M 2.2 did some of the things that it did. But for that matter, most of the CP/M user interface was cribbed from DEC's RT-11, including even things like the PIP command and the SYSGEN procedure. And the story is that after my employer paid Gary Killdal for one of the first high-level languages for our microprocessors (PL/M), they rejected the concept of an "operating system" and Gary went on to create and sell CP/M. Oh well. We're better at making chips than software. |
#67
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Richard Crowley wrote: "S O'Neill" wrote ... Seattle Computer developed QDOS, which is what Moft acquired. Gary Kildall (DR) was just asleep at the switch. Seattle Computer was a DR dealer. I've seen the identical object code from DRDOS to MSDOS. Agreed that Kildall was no match for Gates in the business acumen arena. DRDOS came _after_ MS-DOS. Bzzzzt! Yes, of course, I meant CP/M. I was elected VP of the CP/M Users Group Northwest 20 years ago and my poor memory is troubling. :-( Q-DOS was in fact a poor imitation of DR's CP/M, done by someone who did not really understand why CP/M 2.2 did some of the things that it did. But for that matter, most of the CP/M user interface was cribbed from DEC's RT-11, including even things like the PIP command and the SYSGEN procedure. And the story is that after my employer paid Gary Killdal for one of the first high-level languages for our microprocessors (PL/M), they rejected the concept of an "operating system" and Gary went on to create and sell CP/M. Oh well. We're better at making chips than software. |
#68
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Richard Crowley wrote:
And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". I can confirm that "better is more expensive". I disagree that Apples are merely more expensive. Monster is a different ball park. l any more than I do. They don't even discuss the concept of DIY PCs where you can pick and choose components, and upgrade only the ones you need instead of buying a complete new computer. IMHO that is the great difference between the Mac concept and open-standard PC. I would think that an article in a Linux forum (of all places!) would comprehend open standards better than that? Apple has used all means possible to ensure that they have no competition to either their hardware or software products. That is not an admirable business concept IMHO. YMMV. I think they tried that once and the result was flakey hardware. One can certainly argue with varying success that that is one of the IBM architecture's shortcomings. |
#69
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Richard Crowley wrote:
And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". I can confirm that "better is more expensive". I disagree that Apples are merely more expensive. Monster is a different ball park. l any more than I do. They don't even discuss the concept of DIY PCs where you can pick and choose components, and upgrade only the ones you need instead of buying a complete new computer. IMHO that is the great difference between the Mac concept and open-standard PC. I would think that an article in a Linux forum (of all places!) would comprehend open standards better than that? Apple has used all means possible to ensure that they have no competition to either their hardware or software products. That is not an admirable business concept IMHO. YMMV. I think they tried that once and the result was flakey hardware. One can certainly argue with varying success that that is one of the IBM architecture's shortcomings. |
#70
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![]() "S O'Neill" wrote in message ... Richard Crowley wrote: And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". I can confirm that "better is more expensive". I disagree that Apples are merely more expensive. Monster is a different ball park. l any more than I do. They don't even discuss the concept of DIY PCs where you can pick and choose components, and upgrade only the ones you need instead of buying a complete new computer. IMHO that is the great difference between the Mac concept and open-standard PC. I would think that an article in a Linux forum (of all places!) would comprehend open standards better than that? Apple has used all means possible to ensure that they have no competition to either their hardware or software products. That is not an admirable business concept IMHO. YMMV. I think they tried that once and the result was flakey hardware. One can certainly argue with varying success that that is one of the IBM architecture's shortcomings. |
#71
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![]() "S O'Neill" wrote in message ... Richard Crowley wrote: And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". I can confirm that "better is more expensive". I disagree that Apples are merely more expensive. Monster is a different ball park. l any more than I do. They don't even discuss the concept of DIY PCs where you can pick and choose components, and upgrade only the ones you need instead of buying a complete new computer. IMHO that is the great difference between the Mac concept and open-standard PC. I would think that an article in a Linux forum (of all places!) would comprehend open standards better than that? Apple has used all means possible to ensure that they have no competition to either their hardware or software products. That is not an admirable business concept IMHO. YMMV. I think they tried that once and the result was flakey hardware. One can certainly argue with varying success that that is one of the IBM architecture's shortcomings. |
#72
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"S O'Neill" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". I can confirm that "better is more expensive". I disagree that Apples are merely more expensive. Monster is a different ball park. Was that an intentional pun? :-)) [competitive, Mac-compatible hardware] I think they tried that once and the result was flakey hardware. It was a very startup industry and Apple came down hard on them before they ever got to the 2nd generation of products. They were basing designs on extrapolations of what the (unpublished) Apple specs might have been. One can certainly argue with varying success that that is one of the IBM architecture's shortcomings. Perhaps. But I don't know anyone who denies that hardware (and software/OS, mostly) open-standards and the resulting open-market competition are likely the single most significant factor in the PC's continued, overwhelming market share. Not denying that closed/proprietary was reputedly IBM/Boca's original intent, but for whatever reason, they let it slip out of their control and look where we are now (for better or for worse :-) |
#73
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"S O'Neill" wrote ...
Richard Crowley wrote: And Monster and Apple seem to share the marketing concept that "expensive is better". I can confirm that "better is more expensive". I disagree that Apples are merely more expensive. Monster is a different ball park. Was that an intentional pun? :-)) [competitive, Mac-compatible hardware] I think they tried that once and the result was flakey hardware. It was a very startup industry and Apple came down hard on them before they ever got to the 2nd generation of products. They were basing designs on extrapolations of what the (unpublished) Apple specs might have been. One can certainly argue with varying success that that is one of the IBM architecture's shortcomings. Perhaps. But I don't know anyone who denies that hardware (and software/OS, mostly) open-standards and the resulting open-market competition are likely the single most significant factor in the PC's continued, overwhelming market share. Not denying that closed/proprietary was reputedly IBM/Boca's original intent, but for whatever reason, they let it slip out of their control and look where we are now (for better or for worse :-) |
#74
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On Sun, 3 Oct 2004 19:59:41 -0700, "Richard Crowley"
wrote: But I don't know anyone who denies that hardware (and software/OS, mostly) open-standards and the resulting open-market competition are likely the single most significant factor in the PC's continued, overwhelming market share. Not denying that closed/proprietary was reputedly IBM/Boca's original intent, but for whatever reason, they let it slip out of their control and look where we are now (for better or for worse :-) other well-focused comments snipped for bandwidth It's a unique situation in Consumerland. Has there *ever* been another dominant non-proprietary consumer standard post-war? And secondarily, my memory of the times was that lots hinged on the legal breaking of the IBM BIOS. The lesson of hardware vs. software still haunts us. Down where it counts, in the pants pocket. Chris Hornbeck |
#75
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On Sun, 3 Oct 2004 19:59:41 -0700, "Richard Crowley"
wrote: But I don't know anyone who denies that hardware (and software/OS, mostly) open-standards and the resulting open-market competition are likely the single most significant factor in the PC's continued, overwhelming market share. Not denying that closed/proprietary was reputedly IBM/Boca's original intent, but for whatever reason, they let it slip out of their control and look where we are now (for better or for worse :-) other well-focused comments snipped for bandwidth It's a unique situation in Consumerland. Has there *ever* been another dominant non-proprietary consumer standard post-war? And secondarily, my memory of the times was that lots hinged on the legal breaking of the IBM BIOS. The lesson of hardware vs. software still haunts us. Down where it counts, in the pants pocket. Chris Hornbeck |
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