Looks like Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols from eWeek sees the writing on the walls.
Is VMWare a Dead Duck?
Microsoft, Red Hat, Citrix, Novell and now Oracle are all offering free or open-source virtualization of one sort or another. Can VMware survive?
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2216435,00.aspThis market space is evolving so rapidly. Why would any company ‘bet the farm’ on one virtualization technology and rush into virtualizing their infrastructure when this technology hasn’t matured yet? Buying virtualization products today is like buying a car in a town where there’s only one car dealership. All the cars sold are bare bones Chevrolet Pick-up trucks and everything sold is an additional nickel-and-dime option that you have to pay for.
Meanwhile look at the "new dealerships" that are opening up just over the horizon:
- Microsoft’s Hyper-V
Microsoft’s virtualization hypervisor has a negligible cost associated with it while providing better performance than traditional virtualization technologies. Additionally, it’s compatibility with all Windows Server hardware platforms make it the easy choice for customers looking to virtualize their datacenter on the hardware that they’ve already chosen – as opposed to being forced to purchase specific servers in which VMWare has developed drivers for.
Because VMWare has it’s own proprietary driver model, you can not use Windows drivers for VMWare ESX – it requires that a custom driver be available for the hardware platform you are to virtualize on.
…meanwhile all servers that support Windows Server can leverage Hyper-V.- XenSource
Open Source virtualization has collaborated to standardize with Microsoft on a set of virtualization formats and interfaces to insure management tool interoperability and performance making XenSource a perfect solution for traditional "UNIX shops".- Virtualization-on-hardware
Intel & AMD are all working on virtualization-done-in-hardware where all virtualization operations are handled in a chip. This is a magnitude of power greater than today’s piddly "VT" technologies that are in today’s processors which simply assist virtualization software. How long before the entire market of core virtualization software rendered moot?IT Managers that decide against rushing into this market just so that they can "virtualize their datacenter" regardless of the costs of doing so and regardless of how the market evolves toward a low-to-no cost virtualization technology strategy will find themselves poised as visionaries and keen strategists in comparison to those that rushed to implement a virtualization architecture.
The cost of virtualization software will be one of the first things people consider cutting when they look at cost mitigation within IT.
Category: Computers and Internet
About Computers and Internet
Got My Pal A696
Bought this with a free wireless router from dell.ca in their recent Days of Deals. The appearance is very nice. GPS software is good (I will have comparasion with other software later), but it’s dead when I went down to the garage and sat in the car for the first time, it just said ‘Map corrupted’. Tried to re-install, which was not a good idea because it warned me that remove the program will force me to install from CD later. (Now I think that was because I don’t want to modify the program on the original SD card). So I just removed the SD card, turned it off, and on, and put in the card again, started DestinAtor 6, it worked. I think this could be the machine (O/S?) couldn’t fetch the directory update from the SD card in a timely fashion. Last week, I bought a 4GB SD-HC from Costco for about $55, and loaded all maps on the new card, since then the problem is gone. So I think the SD card came with the deal is not so compatible with the GPS software. (I got a similar situation in one application server running on Windows Server 2003, which need to increase the service timeout value to ensure the services start up properly, otherwise the service could never start. Ha, this is its cousin in Windows family.)
When I drive out and pick up the GPS signal, it’s quite faster to get the position, in about 0.5 to 1 kilometers; and the signal is also quite stable, I can even put it on passenger’s seat and just listen to the voice direction. Later, I attached the mount kit on the windshield, it stays there firmly, and if I put it on-hold, the GPS is still running and voice direction will still come out, so I won’t look at the screen and focus on driving. Using its earphone jack and FM transmitter, I can play MP3 in the background and let the music and voice come out from my car audio system.
Then, I found the map is out-of-date. Some new residential areas just show blank in the map as they were farms in the past. It even doesn’t include a street behind the SuperStore near my home, the street has been there for at least 3 years, so I think the map could be around year 2005. There is also another problem, when there is no signal, it alway positions back to somewhere in Montreal, although I’ve already set my home as orginal. If I use the map of France, its original point is somewhere in Paris.
Machine hangs some times, then need a reset, okay … you have to reset several time a day. For this tiny machine, I need to be patient, it shouldn’t run as fast as a P4 desktop, sometimes I have to wait for a while, especially when it’s synchronizing with the desktop. The screen just freezes and not response to any touch… but if there is no sync, I would hit the reset hole.
Windows Live from Microsoft, failed to sync folders is also fixed by reset. This shouldn’t be a problem, but it drives me mad as it always failed to sync my Live personal settings after successfully sync my Live Mail since last week, no solution so far; and the famous AvantGo also has problem, it refused to sync the content and just gave me ‘Account Locked’ … this is resolved last week and I got a on-screen message from AvantGo apoligize for this issue.
There are more WM6 freebies from Microsoft, include MSNBC Mobile in which I can play daily news briefing via wireless LAN; Live Search; and Wiigo, a RSS stuff. Of couse, MS Reader, an old time freebie, MS provides quite some free download books too.
[Like it, add more thought tomorrow … ]
附: 解决PalmV不能校准触摸屏幕的问题–this is for my old pal–IBM Workpad C3.
Keywords: PalmV digitizer align calibration fix "Mad Digitizer Syndrome"
Links: http://www.freewarepalm.com/utilities/digifix.shtml
http://www.computing.net/pda/wwwboard/forum/1531.html
http://forum.brighthand.com/showthread.php?t=232546&page=2
What might have been
The Ottawa Citizen |
|
Thirteen years ago — an eon in high-tech terms — a small group of psychologists, industrial designers and engineers invented the future at Nortel. The result can be seen today in a stunning 18-inch by 24-inch photo that hangs on the home office wall of John Tyson, the man who ran Nortel’s Corporate Design Group for many years.
The image is a highly stylized, eerie evocation of Apple’s more recent ads. Inside the frame, a female model holds a working prototype of a phone that slides out to produce a full keyboard and a large screen. Touching different parts of the device with a stylus or finger transforms the device into a pager, voice mailbox, wireless phone or fax machine.
The device was called Orbitor and had Nortel played things differently, it could have engineered a brilliant exit from the great telecom crash of 2001.
Instead, a pair of high-tech icons — California-based Apple and Research in Motion of Waterloo, Ont. — exploited the opportunities that Nortel and so many others missed.
They are now establishing just how valuable the franchises are. Paced by sales of the iPod (music downloads) and the iPhone (wireless Internet phone), Apple has seen its market value surge nearly 160 per cent from a year ago to $121 billion (all figures U.S.) At the same time, RIM is riding a surge in popularity for its BlackBerry devices — which make possible e-mail on the go. The company’s share price has soared 264 per cent from a year ago, giving it a market capitalization of almost $44 billion.
In sharp contrast, Nortel’s one-year return has been a relatively pedestrian 18 per cent, for a market value of $11 billion.
The question of how Nortel missed the mark fascinates because there is no doubt among the Orbitor’s designers that they had the smarts to beat Apple in particular to the iPhone.
"Yes, absolutely!" Mr. Tyson said in response to a query about whether Nortel could have managed the trick. Certainly the technical and design talent was there.
Consider, for instance, the experience of Don Lindsay who developed the Orbitor’s user interface — the combination of software and design that makes the device easy to use.
Mr. Lindsay, a protege of Mr. Tyson, left Nortel in 1994 to join Apple. There, he hired the team that created the Macintosh computer’s OS X operating system. Although Mr. Lindsay now works at Microsoft, where he run a design group at Microsoft Live Labs, his influence at Apple would remain profound. His OS X team created the user interface for the iPhone.
Of course, the same group might not have produced a similar product within Nortel, where the R&D culture revolves around the heavy-duty technology that lies at the core of large communications networks.
However, Ken Blakeslee, the former vice-president of business development who led the Orbitor project, recently shed light on just how close Nortel came to selling the Orbitor concept to one of Europe’s biggest cellular phone operators.
"We had 80 finished units going into market and service delivery trials with CellNet (now O2 Telefonica) in 1998," noted Mr. Blakesee, who advises wireless carriers through his British-based consulting firm WebMobility Ventures.
"We were so close to bringing (Orbitor) to life," he said.
What happened? The short answer is that Nortel’s top brass briefly considered the enormous risks involved and took a pass.
A host of factors went into this decision, not least of which was the company’s relative inexperience with wireless technology and consumer electronics. Nortel acquired much of the wireless know-how for Orbitor through its 1992 purchase of a stake in France-based Matra. But this investment was aimed more at acquiring the wireless technology that drives GSM-standard networks — and not the consumer-style electronics typical of mobile handsets that link to the networks.
"We simply could not design and manufacture cost competitive (handsets)," former CEO John Roth noted this week in response an e-mail. "Nortel’s circuit design skills were in large systems and not in consumer products." The wireless services industry was also in a state of flux in the late 1990s. There were three prevailing technical standards for wireless networks (TDMA, GSM and CDMA) and the industry was moving rapidly to third-generation systems that offered higher speeds.
Finland-based Nokia and Chicago-based Motorola were generally considered the favorites to win in the transition. Nokia has a superlative logistics system, along with the ability to design attractive, low-cost handsets. Motorola at the time had the advantage of manufacturing its own semiconductors, which also contributed to lower cost phones.
Mr. Tyson noted that Nortel faced an additional problem. Its engineers at the time were used to designing products that had a life expectancy of five years or more. With Orbitor, they would have to create fresh models every 18 months — even faster later on. This would demand another level of productivity from the designers.
Even so, the decision to build the initial Orbitor prototype was fairly easy.
"You can do wonders with temporary tools to create prototypes for customer trials," said Mr. Tyson. "The key, though, is to commit tens of millions of dollars to go to high-volume manufacturing." The Orbitor group was forced to fight other units within Nortel for these kinds of resources.
And it lost.
It had taken nearly four years to move from concept to customer trials early in 1998. Then followed a period of hiatus as Nortel considered whether to move to the next stage and begin high-volume manufacturing.
Finally, in 2001, as the telecom crash got underway, Nortel killed the entire 120-strong Corporate Design Group — the unit that concerned itself with ergonomics and designs that appealed to the eye and hand (as distinct from Nortel’s thousands of electronic engineers and network design specialists).
For senior Nortel managers, killing the group was an easy call. The company was losing buckets of money and the group was not contributing to the revenues. It was a matter of survival. Mr. Tyson, who had retired in 2000, believes it was a false economy.
"They really underestimated the value of the unit," he said.
The reason: The Group came as close to anything else within Nortel to replicating the freewheeling design culture at Apple — perhaps because Mr. Tyson’s charges spent their days tweaking devices used by consumers, not telephone engineers.
No doubt, Nortel’s executives saw in Nokia’s dominance in the field of wireless handsets confirmation of their decision not to back Orbitor.
Yet, that’s only part of the story. Nokia, after all, simply stuck to its strengths. There was plenty of room, it turned out, in a couple of very lucrative new niches.
Had Nortel committed to Orbitor, there’s no telling what direction the design effort might have gone. Nortel, an early pioneer in the use of e-mail in its internal communications, could have challenged Research in Motion. And Mr. Roth’s company certainly had enough time to produce an iPhone to rival that of Apple.
In fact, it’s worth examining the state of RIM and Apple in 2001, the year Nortel killed its Corporate Design Group, along with Orbitor.
RIM, for instance, had very little heft in 2001 when it posted sales of just $221 million — while Nortel the same year recorded a lofty $17.5 billion in revenues.
RIM was completely focused on wireless data technology, and growing swiftly. Nevertheless, it remained vulnerable. Company prospects stalled in fiscal 2003 and RIM co-CEOs Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie would spend the next few years persuading the planet’s biggest carriers to equip themselves with BlackBerry servers. This is what laid the groundwork for RIM’s recent explosion in new sales.
At Apple, the prospects actually looked bleak in 2001. Company revenues had sunk to $5.4 billion — the lowest since the late 1980s and only half the level of 1995. But 2001 also marked the debut of the iPod. This is the music carrying device that last year for the first time accounted for more revenues at Apple than the sale of computers.
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs followed this coup last month with the introduction of the iPhone, further pushing the company into the realm of consumer electronics.
It is far from clear that the iPhone will be a commercial success. The design is undeniably beautiful but it works so far only on AT&T’s network. But that’s the thing about Apple — you can be sure its technocrats are resolving the issue of coverage even as the firm’s overactive design group is coming up with fresh models.
Apple saw an opportunity and went for it, fully confident in the ability of its designers to measure up.
When Nortel closed Mr. Tyson’s design group in 2001, it stuck to what it knew best — the complex networks that allow the BlackBerry and iPhone to function. Nortel has been a player in the industry long enough to appreciate this may yet prove to be the right call. It’s just difficult to believe amid the noise generated by a pair of firms that were mere pipsqueaks when Nortel got out of their way.
© The Ottawa Citizen 2007
From “put a computer on every desk” to “in every desk” or “be every desk”
In Chinese, there’s a word 桌面电脑=desktop computer for decades, but literally 桌=desk, 面=surface, 电脑=computer. So we should change the translation of desktop computer to 桌上电脑, because 上=top; and use 桌面电脑 for this wonderful new baby – surface computer. (I was little confused when I read this sentence again, let me make it clearer tomorrow.)
Talking about HOWTO: Relocate the menu bar in IE7 to the top of the window
Quote
HOWTO: Relocate the menu bar in IE7 to the top of the window
< from>http://www.veign.com/blog/2007/02/relocate-menu-bar-in-ie7-to-top-of.html>
Would you rather have the menu bar in IE7 to be more like IE6 in the sense that it will appear at the very top of the window? A simple reg hack will get that going for you.
1) Copy the bold text below into a text file (between the lines)
———————————————————–
REGEDIT4
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Toolbar\WebBrowser\]
"ITBar7Position"=dword:00000001
———————————————————–
2) Save the text file with a REG extension (like toolbar.reg)
3) Double click the file and allow it to update your registry
4) Shut down IE7 (if open) and restart it.(Download reg file to accomplish the above: http://veign.com/blog/files/ie7menufix.zip)