Linked by Hadrien Grasland on Tue 25th Jan 2011 15:19 UTC, submitted by M.Onty
Thread beginning with comment 459698
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
... software makers, especially OS names. They'll find a way to screw up. The first two uses of that type of memory for me would be 1- starting or resuming from hibernation/sleep instantly and 2- accessing data while most of the computer is off/sleeping/hibernating.
No matter how fast the hardware got in the 20 years that I've been fiddling with computers, the experience got worse and worse in the terms of things that matter for me: waiting time, bugs, customization possibilities, bloat, DRM (actually, the lack of it), being in control of the PC. Sorry for being that pessimistic but I foresee more abuse than benefit out of that (I mean, for me as a user).
BTW, I don't trust hardware makers either. After all these years, we still have to scour the web for the appropriate driver, and we still have to check "compatibility lists" before buying a printer or a USB dongle for Wifi? And the situation isn't better with CPU makers who change sockets every now and then
No matter how fast the hardware got in the 20 years that I've been fiddling with computers, the experience got worse and worse in the terms of things that matter for me: waiting time, bugs, customization possibilities, bloat, DRM (actually, the lack of it), being in control of the PC. Sorry for being that pessimistic but I foresee more abuse than benefit out of that (I mean, for me as a user).
BTW, I don't trust hardware makers either. After all these years, we still have to scour the web for the appropriate driver, and we still have to check "compatibility lists" before buying a printer or a USB dongle for Wifi? And the situation isn't better with CPU makers who change sockets every now and then
Sorry, but what has any of that got to do with advances with storage technology?
I'm really not sure I understand the point you're making.
"advances with storage technology" are advances in hardware, just like multicore CPUs are advances in chip technology. I guess hardware advances need the appropriate software to be useful, that's where drivers enter the stage, right? That's also probably the reason why I've heard people say that a multicore CPU is useless on Windows 2000.
And until now, in my opinion, software vendors excel in not making a good use of advances in hardware, notably by inflating the sizes of their products beyond what's understandable to me. "A good use" as in "a use that seems to exploit the hardware advances to the fullest extent".
That's what my previous rant was supposed to convey. I hope I'm clear now.





Member since:
2010-03-30
... software makers, especially OS names. They'll find a way to screw up. The first two uses of that type of memory for me would be 1- starting or resuming from hibernation/sleep instantly and 2- accessing data while most of the computer is off/sleeping/hibernating.
No matter how fast the hardware got in the 20 years that I've been fiddling with computers, the experience got worse and worse in the terms of things that matter for me: waiting time, bugs, customization possibilities, bloat, DRM (actually, the lack of it), being in control of the PC. Sorry for being that pessimistic but I foresee more abuse than benefit out of that (I mean, for me as a user).
BTW, I don't trust hardware makers either. After all these years, we still have to scour the web for the appropriate driver, and we still have to check "compatibility lists" before buying a printer or a USB dongle for Wifi? And the situation isn't better with CPU makers who change sockets every now and then.
Edited 2011-01-26 13:01 UTC