In response to Doug's warning  of the McAfee/XP crash problem, one reader  discusses his overall thoughts on XP's reliability: 
  I  have been running XP since it came out, and since Service Pack 1, I have  exactly one crash. It was caused by a bad driver for a junky USB device. This  has been only one fifth the number of crashes on my Windows 7 machine. Are you  sure your check isn't issued in Redmond?  We actually had the McAfee issue all over our state because we use the  enterprise approach for our network. We did not see the never-ending reboot  cycle, but we do not scan on boot either.
  OK, I am done ranting, but I hate sound bite  oversimplifications. I prefer to know exactly what happened and why. I know  that doesn't play to your least common denominator crowd, but it is how we in  the trenches get things done. At least you can get me going once a day. Thanks  for the effort.
    -Anonymous
With Google now recording public and private Wifi hotspots by documenting MAC addresses, is this a legitimate threat to our privacy? Here are some  of your thoughts:
  If a company offers Wifi as a service to the public, they  should be able to submit that info to Google for inclusion on the maps. But for  Google to automatically record and publicly include every hot spot they happen  to pick up is going too far. They are making the presumption that the signal is  intended for public use. Yes, they are public airwaves, and it is legal for  Google to do it, but I do not think they should publish it to the world without  some sort of check. 
  Google certainly likes to push the envelope. I understand  that they are now going to go inside business buildings to film them and add  that data to street view. Again, it is a space that is open to the public, but  what is the upside and what is the downside? Who benefits and who loses?
  Here in America,  the government is generally cast as the bad guy (big brother) and we have  created a lot of rules to restrict government actions. In Europe,  business is generally viewed as the bad guy. Despite good intentions, Google  may end up teaching us the European view. Legal precedent has been established  that it is OK for businesses to collect info about us, even info that the government  cannot collect. However the government has access to all that info just by  issuing a subpoena. 
    -Robert 
  Not sure why this is a big deal. El   Paso County in Colorado already does  the same thing, except the Wifi, pictures, location info and the geographical  location are all public record. 
  -Mitchell
  Google  needs to be stopped. They should be fined for invasion of privacy and distributing  sensitive information to the public. What will they be snooping into next? I am  upset about this.
  -Concerned Citizen
  Even  though we have past the point of information saturation, where should the line  be drawn as to what is acceptable publicly and what SHOULD be strictly private?  Google has become such a tool for exploration that it's become a standard verb  in our language. What's more alarming is that NO ONE seems to care. The more we  lose our privacy, the more we become equally mesmerized at the instantaneous  access to information at our fingertips.
  Privacy  shouldn't be dismissed as paranoia. MANY people have lost their lives (physically  and emotionally) upon seeing their personal lives displayed publicly for all to  see. Even journalists have been abused because someone has a cell phone capable  of snapping quick pics.
  The  loss of privacy may well become the definition of "Being Googled."  This has gone way too far.
    -M 
Share your thoughts with the editors of this newsletter!  Write to   [email protected]. Letters printed in this newsletter may be    edited for length and clarity, and will be credited by first name only   (we do  NOT print last names or e-mail addresses).
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 28, 20104 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		 With  the news of computer pioneer Ed Robers passing away last week, Doug wants to  know some of your tech heroes:
  Ken  Olsen -- Digital Equipment Corporation. With  a $60,000 loan, Grace Hopper as an adviser and the notion of time-sharing  computers in his mind, he built DEC into a $13 billion corporation. Even at its  peak he would land at a table in the cafe and eat lunch with whoever was at the  table.  He never behaved as though he was  better than anybody else. 
More  than 10 years after it was broke up and sold off I still miss that company. 
  An  old timer still going at it. 
    -Tim
  I'm  sure many people will rightfully cite Donald Knuth ("The Art of Computer  Programming"), Brian Kernighan and Ken Thompson (Unix), Dennis Ritchie  ("C"), Bill Gates & Paul Allen (Microsoft, MS-BASIC), C. Wayne  Ratliff (dBase), Mitchell Kapor (Lotus 1-2-3), Charles Petzold (Windows  Programming), and even Steve Wozniak & Steve Jobs (Apple) as their heroes.
  I'd  like to throw in Anders Hejlsberg as my hero for authoring one of the most  influential programs of all time: Turbo Pascal. Until then, the only programming  environment most people had access to was some version of BASIC or hand coding  assembly language programs. Other environments were available (COBOL, FORTRAN,  C, Pascal) but at the cost of hundreds or thousands of dollars putting them out  of the reach of most hobbyists.
  The  introduction of Turbo Pascal was significant not just because of its technical  prowess and speed but also because of its price point -- less than a $100. Not  only did this expose many developers -- both hobbyist and professional -- to a  great language and tool set at little expense, but it also opened the door to  other lower cost development tools and inspired the creation of such cousins as  Turbo C, QuickC, QuickBASIC and MASM that helped forge a cottage industry of  software houses that lead to where we are today.
  Without  Turbo Pascal who's to say how long it would've taken to get here, if ever, and  to make so many of us nerds rich? So my hat's off to Anders Hejlsberg. Thank  you!
  -Erik
 Does  the recent news that PC sales are on the rise mean the economy is recovering?  One reader says no:
  Doug,  that figures out to a PC for every 126 people on the planet, so you should get  that the economy is not back on track. We are not replacing any PCs this year  because there is no money to do so. Sales on some equipment is better, cheap  net books and such, but no one is buying a lot. Windows 7 doesn't even factor  into the equation. We are only replacing equipment that fails. Nothing else. And  that will continue for the foreseeable future.
    -Anonymous
Share your thoughts with the editors of this newsletter!  Write to [email protected]. Letters printed in this newsletter may be  edited for length and clarity, and will be credited by first name only (we do  NOT print last names or e-mail addresses).
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 26, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		I am astounded at the latest Google news. I already knew I  hated Street View -- where Google vans take pictures of our homes, shops and  neighborhoods. This is a huge invasion of privacy, in my opinion, and Street  View has even been used by thieves to stake out houses.
Now, come to find out, Google is also recording if we have  a WiFi hotspot, and if so takes down our MAC address. 
The German government is trying to get Google to stop  this practice, but Google is a stubborn company when it comes to privacy.
Is Google better or worse when it comes to privacy than  other vendors? Should we try to restrict the data Google collects and what they  can do with it? Shoot your thoughts to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 26, 201025 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		If you subscribe to MSDN or TechNet Plus, you can be one  of the first to get your hot little hands on SharePoint 2010 -- and you can  choose your poison today -- either 32 or 64 bits. And if you are new to TechNet  Plus, you can get 25 percent off SharePoint. 
Software Assurance customers can get their mitts on the  new SharePoint tomorrow.
Do you use MSDN or TechNet? Do you read the magazines?  Share your opinions with us at [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 26, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		If you've been jonesin' for the latest and greatest  version of SQL Server, you have only a week or two to wait, depending on your circumstance.  As with SharePoint 2010, MSDN and TechNet Plus customers get first dibs and can  download R2 on May 3. General release is a full 10 days later.
Microsoft won't be content with you just upgrading to R2.  The company also wants you to buy Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010, stitch them  all together and build an intuitive Business Intelligence system. 
I've seen all these in action, and there are a lot of  pretty cool things you can do through integration. My only question is how much  effort does it take to integrate and make these tools really work for your  shop?
Have you looked at these tools? What are the  implementation issues? Send your best guidance to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 26, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		To the Microsoft naysayers and economic pessimists, I  have but one thing to say: $14.5 billion. That is how much money Microsoft  brought in last quarter setting yet another revenue record (wish the stock  would do the same).
Windows 7 and the Windows division led the growth charge.  In fact, the Windows division brought in $4.4 billion. I've got to watch this  puppy more closely. 
Microsoft is also benefiting from its strong consumer  brands such as Xbox (I've spent more on this for my kids than I spend on  computers for myself).
What is the financial future for Microsoft and why isn't  current success reflected in its moribund stock price? Wise advice and wild  speculation equally welcome at [email protected]. 
Also, what do you buy for you kids and is it better  than your own technology? Complaints and explanations readily received at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 23, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Virtualization Review magazine was born in two  Framingham, MA-area restaurants -- Legal Seafood and Minado, an insanely great  Japanese buffet. 
Entrepreneurs are forever coming through Framingham (which ironically where half of  the Redmond Media Group is based). These folks have to predict the future;  otherwise they would blow their and their investors' money. 
So selfishly I'd always ask what market they'd launch  media in if they were me. Nine out of ten said virtualization. I mentioned this  to my boss, Henry Allain, and before I knew it we were in full magazine and Web  site launch mode. 
Once the word was out, heads of virtualization startups  started coming through town, and haven't stopped since. It's been a real  education in technology, entrepreneurism and even culture. Turns a good number  of these companies have roots in either Russia  or Israel,  and sometimes both! Learn more here.
That's a pretty long prelude to this item on Starwind  Software, and my sushi lunch with CEO Zorian Rotenberg. Starwind is all about  uptime for virtual machines, be they VMware or Hyper-V. 
Like Virsto, which I covered recently here, Starwind  helps IT replace expensive proprietary disk arrays with commodity white box  disks made sophisticated through software. 
Starwind takes industry standard servers and turns them  into SANs using iSCSI rather than Fibre Channel, making it easier for the  average IT Joe to handle. 
There are a lot of smart people behind Starwind.  Rotenberg used to work for Walter Scott, then CEO of Acronis, which does a lot  of development in Russia.  And Ratmir Timashev, founder of Aelita and now Veeam, is an investor and board  member. Timashev was chosen as a Windows guru 3 years ago by Redmond magazine.
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 23, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Security software, such as antivirus, is supposed to  prevent infection and keep our machines up and running -- just like a good  tune-up on the family Caravan. 
But an antivirus update from McAfee has the opposite  effect. It made XP-based machines crash more than XP itself (I've had a million  XP machines and it is the NASCAR of operating systems)!
This glitch only impacts VirusScan Enterprise customers  and concerns its new virus definition "DAT 5958" which mistakenly  believes that a key Windows file is itself a virus (given my XP reboot problems  over the years, DAT 5958 may just be right!). 
  
With the Window's driver file disabled, XP goes into a  never ending cycle of rebooting (that sounds like my old Amiga 3000). 
McFee is building a new virus definition file that should  make XP crash at its normal rate.
What is your favorite antivirus tool? Is XP as reckless  as I think or I am just a poor administrator of my own PCs? Let 'er rip at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 23, 201012 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		We start Friday's mailbag with a comment on the shelf life  of Windows' Service Pack support:
  Service Packs are FREE  and operating systems which are not at the latest patch-level -- including  service packs (which are mostly bundled security patches) -- pose a threat not  just to the users of those systems but to all systems on the same network. 
  Despite the naysayers,  Microsoft has always been reasonable about troubleshooting support, has (unlike Applicationle)  always provided free patches and service packs. Aside from emergency  troubleshooting, Microsoft is right to tell mean to install the latest service  pack. There is no reason not to. 
    - C. Mark 
One reader gives insight on why a huge company like  Microsoft would start outsourcing its IT help desk:
  My company has started to outsource a few  internal IT application locations. A couple being Blackberry Support and Spam  filtering. I am sure there will be more to come.
  As far as Microsoft outsourcing their IT, I  am not surprised at all. Look at Microsoft PSS support; it has been so poor for  the past couple of years, what's the point of calling when you can get most  issues resolved by using Google or other third-party sites like Experts Exchange?
    -Don
And finally, here are a couple more responses to the Office ribbon  hot-topic Doug wrote about in April's Redmond magazine: 
  I thought, way back  when, part of the sales pitch for Windows was that all applications were going  to have the same interface and look, making training easier. You know in  general what's under file, edit, view, etc. so you were going to be more  productive. Now they throw that away. Count me in for "classic"  Office, not "new" Office. I do think they make these changes just to  have something else to sell. How much grief and costs are involved  with forced upgrades? Win 7 on your new machine? Now you need to  buy a new printer, new version of that application you've been using for  years, etc. Oh, and now that file you mail to someone else won't  open because they have an older version of that same application. 
  Sometimes I am  embarrassed being in this industry. Like new tax laws, accountants and lawyers  -- job security is for the friends of legislators. 
    -Mike
  I've used Office 2007 for over a year now, so I feel  comfortable that I have "given it a fair shake." I like a few things,  but despise most of it. And this is after reading extensive blogs and  interviews by Jensen Harris and other Microsoft employees who foisted this upon  us, to try to understand their rationale and vision.
  Here's what I like:
  
    - The size of the buttons change as the window  size changes -- no more "buttons off the window" problem for any  reasonably sized window. This was the one really good idea. 
 
    - The previous worst idea ever: the Office 2003  menus that were different every time  you open them, defeating muscle memory quite handily, has at least been  killed off.
 
  
  Here's what I hate:
  
    - The organization is illogical. For example, to  insert a slide into a PowerPoint deck, do NOT go to Insert; instead, go to Home  and select New Slide. Add-ins go onto a special "Add-Ins" tab,  instead of where the functionality they represent would logically be found as  with the old menu system. (For example, SnagIt should be under Insert, since it  "inserts" a screenshot -- get it?) 
 
    - The ribbon is memory-deficient. For example, if  I resize the object palette in the Drawing section of the Home tab in  PowerPoint, the next time I open it, it's back to Microsoft's favorite size and  shape. Why am I permitted to resize it if it just snaps back to the way it was  when I let go?
 
    - The implementation is inconsistent. The ribbon  eliminated menus -- except that the round orb with the Office logo is now used  for the File menu, it's just a lot harder to find now. Using Office 2007 means  using the ribbon when editing an e-mail instead of using the tried-and-true  buttons when managing e-mails. 
 
    - Critical features are now hard to reach. For  example, aligning objects is now three clicks down. And if I want to align the  top and the left, it's a total of six clicks. This is not more efficient  than having buttons right there when I need them.
 
    - It's almost customization-free. I can't move the  object alignment buttons to somewhere sane. I can't create a new tab with all  of my key macros on it -- only what I can fit on the little bulb thingy next to  the secret File menu. I can't move New Slide to the Insert tab. Every  brain-dead decision Microsoft made is chiseled into ribbon granite.
 
    - It infantilizes the user. With the menu system  invented by Xerox, keyboard shortcuts are clearly spelled out on the menu  itself. Thus over time, for example, a user learns to hit Control-B for bold,  or Control-V to paste. People are allowed to learn. The ribbon ensures that the user must rely on his mouse  for the rest of his life -- unless, I suppose, he pays Microsoft for a class in  how to become more computer-literate.
 
    - The menus are just too freaking big. Just as  Microsoft is intent to more than consume increasingly fast processor power and  memory with bigger software, they seem determined to fill up my larger monitors  with even more of their stuff. So  I get a faster computer with more memory and a huge display, and it runs  slower, exhausts memory sooner, and displays less of the stuff I bought the  computer to actually develop. Isn't this backwards?
 
  
  Whenever I complain about the many problems with the ribbon  design, I'm told "in time you'll get used to it." No I won't. The ribbon  is illogical, not configurable, inconsistent, inefficient, insulting to  learning-capable adults and just too darned big. It was a bad idea that  Microsoft should abandon. 
    -George
Share your thoughts with the editors of this newsletter! Write to  [email protected]. Letters printed in this newsletter may be  edited for length and clarity, and will be credited by first name  only (we do NOT print last names or e-mail addresses).
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 23, 20103 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		With his constant obscure references in his comedy, Doug thinks that  Dennis Miller is full of himself. Here's what you think: 
  I  like Dennis Miller and think he's a comedic genius. But one pretty much has to  have a notepad or computer handy to look up his references that make you go "Huh?"  Hmm, I smell justification for an iPad here.
    -Anonymous
  Dennis points out a lot of truth. Hurts huh?
    -Anonymous
  You are COMPLETELY right about Dennis Miller!  Whereas  I find him funny, he drops so many jokes that reference some over-educated sources,  like a Bogvarian Opera (not sure if I spelled that right or really know what  that is) or super political jokes that he completely loses you.  It's like  he's talking down to you.
    
    Anyway, I've always felt that, and am glad others do as well.
    -Dean
  Used  to funny but now is a pompous bag of hot gas.
    -Anonymous
  I  long ago grew weary of listening to Dennis Miller's pretentious rants that  seemed designed to showcase the fact that he thinks he is smarter than the  average bear.  He hit his stride as the  News Guy on SNL and has been nothing but a bore ever since (including, but not  limited to, his current Libertarian rants).   I suspect his fans profess their undying affection for him because most  of them are afraid to admit that they understand only about 70 percent of his  references and thus would lose the air of superiority that they have also  assumed. 
    -Stu
  I'm glad to find out others think so too. (That he's more  pretentious than he is funny.)
    -Anonymous
Share your thoughts with the editors of this newsletter!  Write to [email protected]. Letters printed in this newsletter may be  edited for length and clarity, and will be credited by first name only (we do  NOT print last names or e-mail addresses).
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 21, 20107 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		
				Virsto, short for virtual storage (finally a new company with  a name that makes obvious sense!), came into town recently to introduce  themselves and their first product. CEO Mark Davis sat down over a plate fine  local seafood (I had salmon, very rare) and explained where his company came  from and what it intends to do. 
Virsto, as the name implies, is in the storage virtualization  market, but with a twist. Its solution is based on a hypervisor. Virsto's two  claims to fame are ease and speed of VM deployment through thin  provisioning and maximizing I/O throughput. The whole idea is to avoid  expensive proprietary disk arrays and turn white box disks into sophisticated  virtual storage. 
Virsto is betting on Hyper-V as it ships as a Hyper-V  plug-in.
Like an array of virtualization startups, a good portion of  Virsto's management team has a Russian background.
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 21, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		My IT director, the awesome Erik Lindgren, wrote me recently  about the death of Ed Roberts who created the first ever PC -- the Altair, and  propelled Microsoft into the stratosphere with a rewrite of Basic. Oh, and he  later became a medical doctor too!
Bill Gates never forgot the pioneer who made Microsoft what  it is, so on Bill's personal Web site he and Paul Allen penned a touching  tribute. Here's a quick excerpt:
   "Ed was truly a pioneer in the personal  computer revolution, and didn't always get the recognition he deserved. He was  an intense man with a great sense of humor, and he always cared deeply about  the people who worked for him, including us. Ed was willing to take a chance on  us -- two young guys interested in computers long before they were commonplace --  and we have always been grateful to him. The day our first untested software  worked on his Altair was the start of a lot of great things. We will always  have many fond memories of working with Ed in Albuquerque, in the MITS office right on  Route 66 -- where so many exciting things happened that none of us could have  imagined back then."
  
Who is your computer hero? Nominations readily accepted at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on April 21, 20101 comments