Much like a pair of old hippie jeans, turns out open source software can be 
  
full 
  of holes, too. So Doug asked readers last week whether they'd still trust 
  open source -- and if they miss said hippie jeans: 
   I still have my old, patched, hippie pants. What I miss is being the 
    size I was when they fit.
   As for trusting open source software, or any software for that matter, 
    my motto is "trust, but verify."
    -Dave
  I trust open source 100 percent. I have used Open Office for years, both 
    on Windows and Mac; I do not use MS Office. I also use Firefox on Windows 
    and have had no problems -- it's also much faster than IE. Nothing is 100 
    percent secure (I work in IT and manage Windows desktops/servers, Cisco, F5 
    Firepass -- they all need to be patched). But 100 percent for open source! 
    I introduced many people to OO and Firefox and haven't heard any complaints.
   Do I miss my hippie jeans (and also my tie-dyed shirts and bell bottoms)? 
    Sure do...but I still have the long hair!
    -Bob
  Actually, I don't trust any computer, no matter who wrote the software. 
    I manage to make a pretty good living working on them, but I have no delusions 
    that they are making my life better. If you do trust them, don't cry about 
    how your life got screwed up. You messed it up putting your faith in a stupid 
    machine.
   I will say that you can install any software in an exploitable manner. 
    Most software can also be installed in a reasonably secure manner. If you 
    do it right, it will work (yup, even Microsoft software); if you do it wrong, 
    it won't work well (yup, even Microsoft software). What would be helpful would 
    be to get past the name-calling and accusations and focus on getting a tool 
    that does what you need.
    -Anonymous
Got anything to add? Let us have it! Leave a comment below or send an e-mail 
  to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Kim Kido bought a Vista PC, presumably with the intention of using and enjoying 
  the new Microsoft operating system. But Kido hated Vista, and after carefully 
  reading the tiny print of the legalese-laden license agreement, Kido demanded 
  a refund from HP. 
The bad news for HP? Kido is a blogger, and her entire story of two months 
  worth of e-mail and telephone calls ended 
  up on Valleywag. Kido eventually got her $200 back, and HP got far more 
  than $200 worth of bad press.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A few weeks ago, I had a nice sushi lunch with the folks from 
DNSstuff. 
  Their whole reason for being is that the Domain Name System (DNS) is the new 
  hacker target, and taking down DNS takes a whole heap of machines along with 
  it. 
Those folks sure were prescient as Microsoft recently 
  had to patch its DNS implementation -- a patch that itself caused problems 
  such as Exchange outages. 
Nevertheless, Microsoft is "urgently 
  warning" IT to patch their DNS. The vulnerability can allow spoofing 
  attacks, although no such attacks have yet been reported.
Do you take DNS security seriously? Share your thoughts and advice by writing 
  [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Sun and Microsoft get along fine now, thanks to a 2004 deal where Microsoft 
  paid the Mountain View computer concern some $1.8 billion to settle Sun's lawsuits. 
  That's why I'm sure that neither company is complaining about Transitive Corp.'s 
  QuickTransit software which allows Solaris apps -- even those written for SPARC 
  processors -- to 
run 
  under Hyper-V on Intel boxes. 
The most interesting part of Transitive might not be its product, but one of 
  its advisors. Dr. Mendel Rosenbaum is a technical advisor to Transitive. Virtualization 
  buffs may recognize that as the name of VMware's co-founder and chief scientist. 
  Is it any wonder, then, that QuickTransit also works with VMware?
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    OK or not, Steve Jobs' health and Apple's future are still on top of many people's 
  minds. Here are some of your thoughts:
   Mr. Jobs IS a rather remarkable man, but every remarkable human in history 
    has had to retire at some point.
   Organizations need to plan for the same and the rest of us can count 
    our blessings to have coincided in time with the lives of the living remarkable.
    -Anonymous
  I watched the iPhone 3G announcement video a while back and I was taken 
    aback at how gaunt Jobs looked. Not being an Apple customer, I don't keep 
    track of what happens there so I was not even aware he had been sick. After 
    reading that investors are dumping stock simply on the rumour of his ill-health, 
    I can't imagine what will happen if/when he passes away.
   I agree with you. The industry will, eventually, lose one of the most 
    important figures in the history of personal computing. Get well, Steve!
    -Dan
One reader thinks the recent BlackBerry flaw, now 
  patched, still isn't enough to make people turn to the iPhone:
   What? No one is dropping the BlackBerry to get an iPhone. If you can 
    find a 3G network, if Father Steve allows you to run the app you need and 
    if you don't mind doing hard resets to restore your phone once or twice a 
    day, you might want an iPhone. If you don't mind very short battery life unless 
    you turn off the GPS and Wi-Fi, you might want an iPhone. If you want to restrict 
    yourself to one carrier -- and not the best one, at that -- you might want 
    an iPhone. If you want to send the phone in just to change the battery, you 
    might want an iPhone.
   The iphone is a toy, and not a very good one, and is not suited for business 
    use. The BlackBerry may not be perfect but it works and it works every time 
    you use it, something no one can say about the iPhone.
    -John
Doug asked 
  for advice recently on how to keep multiple machines in synch. Jeff thinks 
  the answer is in Google:
   Just give in to the dark side. Turn your life and your documents over 
    to Google. No OS needed, any computer will do. If that won't work, try Mozy. 
    Great backup program. Restores are a little slow but you can initiate them 
    yourself. I recommend only restoring what you need to begin with; get the 
    rest when you get your full machine up and running. If you have Google popping 
    all your e-mail accounts, you'll always have copies of them.
    -Jeff 
Tell us what you think! Leave a comment below or send an e-mail to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 24, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Wall Street and Mac fans are biting their nails over 
rumors 
  that Steve Jobs is in poor health after he made public appearances looking thin 
  and sickly. 
The New York Times looked 
  into the matter and reporter John Markoff writes that Jobs himself has been 
  reassuring friends and Apple board members that he's just fine. There's apparently 
  a problem that caused him to lose weight, and he had surgery to straighten that 
  out (imagine that: surgery to actually gain weight!). 
Still, there's pressure for Apple to disclose its succession plan in the event 
  that Jobs steps down. If Apple ever does get a new leader, could that person 
  please, please license the Mac OS to hardware OEMs like HP and Dell? The market 
  needs a good $500 Mac laptop.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 24, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Kevin Johnson, the former head of Microsoft's Platforms & Services Division, 
  has resigned, and his group -- which includes Vista as well as online services 
  -- has been 
split 
  into two.
When I first heard the news, I figured Johnson was taking the rap for the poor 
  market performance of Vista, and the fact that Microsoft lost 
  over a billion dollars in its online business. 
I was wrong. Johnson is the new CEO of Juniper, the high-flying network gear 
  maker. Juniper is one hot company. A nobody seven years ago, it's now arguably 
  the only networking company that can truly challenge Cisco. Good luck, Kevin!
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 24, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Just weeks after VMware 
unceremoniously 
  ditched founder and CEO Diane Greene, you'd think the company would report 
  poor financial results. But no; actually, the company 
reported 
  great financial results. At least in my opinion. 
Second quarter revenues of almost half-a-billion dollars were up 54 percent 
  compared to the same quarter last year. Profits are shining, as well -- up $14 
  million to $61 million in quarterly profits. And it's expecting to grow almost 
  50 percent this year compared to '07.
Jeepers. I guess Greene really did mess up! I'm sure there are plenty of companies 
  that would want her to screw them up to the tune of 50 percent growth!
Of course, those stunning growth rates did nothing to please the Brooks Brothers-clad 
  stock set. These clowns say VMware isn't growing as fast as they expected, making 
  Greene a colossal failure in their eyes. Nuts, eh?
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 23, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Critics love to slap Microsoft around for its security problems. And by admitting 
  its faults each and every Patch Tuesday, Redmond gives these nitpickers plenty 
  of ammo. The open source world tends to keep its flaws more on the down-low 
  -- not exactly hidden, but not exactly disclosed with fanfare, either.
That's why it may be a surprise to some that open source apps have more holes 
  than a pair of hippy jeans, and are far 
  less secure than commercial apps.
Do you trust open source? And do you miss your old, patched, hippy pants? Send 
  answers to both to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 23, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Some folks are real dopes -- and there's no better way to discover that than 
  on the Internet. We have thugs posing with guns on MySpace, predators leaving 
  electronic trails of perversion, and now a 
brand-new 
  idiot: Joshua Lipton. 
This 20-year-old moron was caught drunk driving (it's easy to get caught when 
  you crash and nearly kill someone). Then, two weeks later, someone posted Facebook 
  pictures of Lipton posing with a bunch of beer cans and wearing a striped prison 
  shirt. That's not going to look too good at trial. 
Do social networking sites like Facebook have any role in your organization? 
  Tell me yes, no or maybe by writing to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 23, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    So is Google becoming 
Microsoft's 
  evil twin? Here's what a few readers thought:
   You're dead-on with your assessment of Google. I've had the same concerns 
    myself for some time now.
    -Paul
  I have to echo your thoughts. I had rather positive feelings about Google 
    until I was invited to an interview at their shiny new datacenter in Central 
    Oregon last year. After a VERY bizarre interview -- unlike anything I had 
    ever experienced in 20 years in IT -- I did some more checking and had to 
    reach the same conclusion. I don't know for sure if Google is evil, but it 
    is certainly doing a lot to make me think so! 
   One example: The name of the fake company that it hides behind that houses 
    their datacenter (the sign outside) is "ValDeMoort Industries." 
    Now, I have to ask, who would name their datacenter after the ULTIMATE EVIL 
    character in Harry Potter? It was dumb, but maybe not. Maybe it is really 
    a message? 
   Honestly, I think Google just suffers from being an extremely immature 
    company run by extremely immature billionaires. Microsoft has had the advantage 
    of 30 years of experience, BG hired some of the top business managers in the 
    world right out of the gate, and he "grew into" his success.
    -Jim
   Nope, I totally agree with you. While I'm a MS partner and respect MS, 
    I don't always agree with them either -- but at least you can talk to someone.
   Google bought Postini recently. If Postini weren't such a great product, 
    we would have dumped it 100 percent becuase of the crap we have been going 
    through. And this is an understatement.
    -Don
  Yes, I think Google has too much and it needs to be cut back. No one should 
    get any slice of Yahoo; it should stand on its own two feet. Ditto with MS 
    on the same subject, so yeah -- they are becoming the evil twins. 
   And do you think that MS buying Yahoo's search business will help MS? 
    I don't think it will help at all. MS will screw it up and it will burn. The 
    problem that I see is that what will Yahoo then get for income to do other 
    things such as its one-of-a-kind chat system which feature-for feature kills 
    anyone else? I would invest in Yahoo, but only if King Carl steps down and 
    leaves.
    -Bruce
  I guess I would rather opt for free services from a vendor that provides 
    open source options for those not willing to fork out money for an expensive 
    OS that is unreliable, less secure and a huge resource hog. I can't wait for 
    the Google phone.
    -Nathan
  I live in a Microsoft/Dynamics world all day long and I'm happy with that 
    world -- it keeps that regular paycheck coming. But I don't want to see a 
    monopolists dictating to that world, Microsoft, Google or anyone else.
    -Ron
Doug recently asked readers to name their favorite defunct IT magazines. Here 
  are some of your nominations:
 
   I'll take InfoWorld over any of the others any day. I wouldn't 
    say it's defunct either. I continue to get lots of good stuff from them.
    -Bruce
  It's still in print, but nothing the way it was in the "good old 
    days." The magazine: Computer Shopper. To pore over the endless 
    advertisements when looking to build your own systems was priceless.
    -Michael
  My favorite defunct magazine is not one related to my current occupation: 
    Drag Racing USA. Back in the '70s, before it went defunct, this magazine 
    covered both the races and the newest machines, regardless of what class the 
    car was in.
   One of the last magazines that I received featured a new short dragster 
    that Big Daddy built and called the Swamp Rat. Two weeks later, I'm at my 
    local drag strip, Renegade Raceway. Don Garlits brought his longer dragster 
    and raced it. While I was walking through the pits, he was signing some pictures 
    for fans. When he was signing a picture for me, I asked him, "Where is 
    the Swamp Rat?" He looked at me kinda funny and asked, "Where did 
    you hear about that?" I told him, "In Drag Racing USA."
   Turns out it was Don's favorite magazine, too, and I got to spend quite 
    a bit of time talking with him between the races about his newest dragster 
    and his career in general. I regret to say that I no longer have that signed 
    picture, but I do have the great memory of getting to talk with one of drag 
    racing's great giants in his prime. That is a memory for a lifetime that would 
    not have happened without that magazine.
    -Les
And yesterday, reader Chris suggested 
  that the iPhone fan who got teased 
  by a television reporter while waiting in line should've responded with 
  some snark. One reader thinks that's missing the point:
   I think Chris did miss something. It's true that the man in line for 
    an iPhone didn't exactly "own" the reporter, but he also didn't 
    sound like he was going to run home and cry. What he said was on the money. 
    The question was insulting and in no way should pass for news reporting. The 
    idea of attempting humor in response to such a condescending question is inappropriate, 
    and acting like the reporter's behavior was funny would have just encouraged 
    him.
   What those news people were doing is like something elementary school 
    kids do whenever they don't understand something. It was nothing but a smug 
    attempt at trying to belittle others to make themselves feel better about 
    themselves. It is a common behavior among luddites or the technically-challenged 
    to attempt to demean those that understand or enjoy what they do not. If anyone 
    wants to eschew electronics, then let them continue to bang blocks of wood 
    together. It's none of my business. I don't see computer experts walking around 
    with microphones asking everyone without the most recent phone or PDA if they 
    are virgins or eunuchs.
    -A person who doesn't own an iPhone and probably never will
Tell us what you think! Leave a comment below or send an e-mail to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 23, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In the weeks since he took over VMware, new CEO Paul Maritz has been pretty 
  darn quiet. My guess is he was huddling with EMC honchos figuring out what to 
  say. Well, they still haven't announced how independent VMware may or may not 
  be from EMC, and they still haven't announced a grand, new strategy, either.
Maritz did make some rather bold pronouncements in this week's earnings call. 
  First, he announced that ESXi, the embedded hypervisor, will 
  be free. With bundling deals with all the major server makers, this makes 
  ESXi almost part of the operating system. 
This is big news, but it's not VMware's first free tool. It has the VMware 
  Player for PCs, and VMware Server, a stripped-down tool, is also free. 
Maritz also gave a glimpse of the future. ESX, the enterprise hypervisor, remains 
  immensely important, but the more critical aspect is building out the overall 
  infrastructure.
I think VMware should design infrastructure tools that are totally independent 
  of the hypervisor, and support Xen and Hyper-V. That's VMware's future. 
Does a free ESXi change the game? Send your take to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on July 23, 20080 comments