Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 13th Jan 2009 10:27 UTC
Every now and then, some blogger working for a big website will write a story about how company Abc should make radical move Xyz in order to better, eh, well, that's usually left in the dark. These are generally more akin to said bloggers hoping for radical move Xyz rather than there being a well-argumented reasoning. Radical moves in the technology business don't happen very often, but when they do, there's generally a good reason for them.
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If I don't like Windows, then I don't use it - simple as.
Really is? Than tell it my boss, or our IT department that took years to setup our IT environment as it is now. Or tell it all people that are using special scientific, business or what ever special needs software that is only available for Windows.
I don't whine on about how such-and-such open source licence would be better than propriatry software. I just use and support the opperating systems I like.
What you and "Joe the Plumber" like does not matter. What Siemens, Deutsche Bank, Boeing, and Gazprom like is relevant because they have the cash to pay software developers or SaaS providers to engineer, maintain, AND support software THEY want.
Member since:
2006-10-27
Really is? Than tell it my boss, or our IT department that took years to setup our IT environment as it is now. Or tell it all people that are using special scientific, business or what ever special needs software that is only available for Windows.
What you and "Joe the Plumber" like does not matter. What Siemens, Deutsche Bank, Boeing, and Gazprom like is relevant because they have the cash to pay software developers or SaaS providers to engineer, maintain, AND support software THEY want.