Floyd Marinescu leaves The Server Side

Floyd Marinescu is leaving TheServerSide.com after 6 years – you may recognize his name as one of the editors (Editorial Director) of the posts on the site.

The number of articles and posts to TheServerSide is nowhere near the volume that it was from about 5 years ago when I first reading their site, but even still the posts are always informative and their articles are very well written. TheServerSide.com has defintely been slowing down recently over the past couple of years, and I hope this is not an indication that the current owners (media company TechTarget) are losing interest in this valuable community, that was founded originally by The Middleware Company and Ed Roman (author in my opinion of the first best books on EJBs).

IBM say Microsoft is wrong about TCO of Linux

Microsoft have long been playing up the FUD (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt) of installing and running Linux based systems, claiming that the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) of Windows based systems is lower than Linux.

IBM has just reported that from their own analysis and study with 20 companies with more that 250 employees using Linux based systems that the TCO is indeed lower.

The sad thing is that I know people who bought into the Microsoft propaganda, which as it turns out, is nothing but just that.

Microsoft to release WinFS as an add-on to XP and Vista

Microsoft were originally going to include WinFS, the replacement for FAT32 and NTFS filesystems as an integral part of Vista (the operating system formally known as ‘Longhorn’), but it got pulled in order that they would not delay the shipping of Vista in 2006 (already late from previous expected release dates mind you).

Microsoft has recently annouced that they will be shipping WinFS as an add-on to XP and possibly Vista at a later point, in a series of beta releases for developers to play with and take advantage of the new file storage and searching capabilities.

This is sad because:

  • WinFS was to replace the antiquated NTFS and FAT32 based file systems, which have their legacy roots firmly planted in DOS. Both of these grew from the origins of MS-DOS. DOS was a great operating system and FAT worked fine when harddrives were only 40MB in size, but now we have 250GB drives (and 4 of these in my machine gives me 1 Terrabyte of online storage!) I can’t find a thing on my drive. I also have a much diverse collection of media on my machine that I need to be able to index and search in some logical order that makes sense to me personally. WinFS was promising to be a file system replacement that addressed these issues for todays data storage.
  • If WinFS is to be added as an add-on, and early beta versions are indicating that it is to be used as a service callable by an application, then this is a sad thing. Why? Because it indicates the DOS legacy filesystems are here to stay and applications have to be explicitly written to take advantage of the new filesystem storage and search capabilities. This means some of my files will be lost forever in the hierarchical structure of DOS based directories, will a smaller part of my files used by application XYZ will be stored elsewhere in this new filesystem. What sort of half-hearted solution is that? COme on Bill, I need to search all my junk on my machine, not just part of it with a particular application.

The other pressure against WinFS seeing light of day is the fact that the MSN boys have been off by themselves dreaming up Google Desktop Search type functionality, which although searching against my legacy DOS based filesystem, may offer me some hope of finding things on my machine, and therefore reduces the need for WinFS to get completed.

Of all the new features to be included in Longhorn that looked exciting it was this one, and now we may or may not get it, and if we do, it will be in an optional add on.