Monday, June 11, 2007

Emails from the Edge; Mr. October or Zuba Tuba.

Hello Mo;
Here we are poised on the precipice of the 21st century advance from traditional to new thinking in computers and BOTH Apple and Microsoft are sitting there almost about able to do what they've been working on since 2001 (at least). Both of them. At the same time. Without any notification to anyone sensible as to why that "October" deliverance is enforced on two players who, I would think, would be dying with anxiety and beating the slaves to get ahead of each other. And yet... low and cornholed, BOTH of them are locked in time like some action figure pre Hans Solo cast in carbonite. There's Zuba Tuba, chief bounty hunter of the Zith captured trying to steal Java the Rut's nuptials and bikini key. Over there in the corner is Nooka Pinko, gunfighter for the Federation caught with Java the Rut's bikini key around his neck. Both carbonized like cooked fossils on the barbeques of market time.
This is the "Hall of Heroes". Very funny.
A delay to October shows in the faces of the developers "today’s WWDC audience wasn’t as engaged and enthused as Apple’s developers and customers normally are for a Jobs love-fest. Some said they thought developers were let down by Jobs’ failure to discuss the geekier bits".
What are the geekier bits for Apple?

1. ZFS file system - Just like Microsoft's WinFS. Isn't THAT a coincidence. OK. No enabling yet.
2. iPhone software development kit - Why no micro runtime development? Why no .Net micro-kernel development available? Can't develop for a micro-kernel like MLE?
3. "Jobs told developers they could simply use existing Ajax and Web 2.0 development technologies to write to Safari" - Just like Microsoft's Atlas/Atlas AJAX ... both primitive precursors to something called Emily.
4. "since the Safari engine inside the iPhone will be identical to the one for Mac OS X today" - the same Microsoft has said to the common language runtime school

Know what I think? I think VCSY has licensing on Emily on hold until they reach a patent or October deeadline. I wonder if they can stall them further than October? Probably not without a whole lot of questions.
Portions of virtualization (stuff around USPTO 7,076,521 ) and arbitration (stuff around USPTO 6,826,744 ) can be done using versions of the kind of development regimes each of these companies have been using for the past five or so years. The true virtues of Emily won't be available to the traditional companies until it is patented and can come out of the closet. They can use what they've built using their billions in R&D until October at which time will the horses be let out of the gates?
When does this get to be a horse race?
I agree with Mary Jo here: "Why is Leopard so superior to Vista — other than the non-trivial fact that there will be just one version of Leopard that will be priced at $129 (as opposed to six-plus versions of Vista at a variety of price points well in excess of that amount)?"
June 11th, 2007

Leopard looks like … Vista

Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 4:06 pm
I just sat through my second Steve Jobs keynote ever. (My first was MacWorld in New York in 2002.)
What struck me at the June 11 Apple Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) event wasn’t the glitzy demos, the rockstar-like worship of Apple CEO Steve Jobs or the “I’m Steve Jobs” parody video by the “I’m a PC” guy.
Instead, it was the excitement by the 5,000 WWDC attendees about many technologies in the forthcoming Mac OS X “Leopard” release that already exist in Windows Vista.
A few Mac-show regulars said they thought today’s WWDC audience wasn’t as engaged and enthused as Apple’s developers and customers normally are for a Jobs love-fest. Some said they thought developers were let down by Jobs’ failure to discuss the geekier bits, like Leopard’s use of the ZFS file system. others thought the crowd was subdued because they wanted more iPhone particulars and were let down by the lack of an iPhone software development kit. (Jobs told developers they could simply use existing Ajax and Web 2.0 development technologies to write to Safari, since the Safari engine inside the iPhone will be identical to the one for Mac OS X today.)
To this Windows-show veteran, however, the WWDC developer audience seemed positvely effusive.
I’ve sat through countless Microsoft demos of Vista at a variety of consumer and business events. I don’t remember ever hearing thunderous applause when Microsoft showed off Flip 3D or Vista’s ability to preview thumbnails of documents. The “wows” were few and far between. Yet when Jobs put almost identical versions of these features in Leopard through their paces, there were lots of oohs and ahhs.

But if you’ve seen Vista, there’s no way you could help but compare the feature-complete Leopard beta Jobs showcased with Windows Vista. And — surprise — Vista looked pretty darn up-to-date in comparison.
Jobs told WWDC keynoters that he would show ten of the best of the 300 new features coming in Leopard when it ships in October this year. Here’s what Jobs’ hit list looked like to this Windows user:
1. New Leopard Desktop: Not a whole lot different from Vista’s Aero and Sidebar.
2. New Finder: Many of the same capabilities as the integrated “Instant Search” in Vista (the subsystem that Google is trying to get the Department of Justice to rule as being anti-competitive). The new Leopard Coverflow viewing capability looked almost identical to Vista’s Flip 3D to me.
3. QuickLook: Live file previews — just like the thumbnail preview capability available in Vista.
4. 64-bitness: Leopard is the first 64-bit only version of a desktop client. Vista comes in 32-bit and 64-bit varieties. And most expect Windows Seven will still be available in 32-bit flavors. Until 32-bit machines go away, it seems like a good idea to offer 32-bit operating systems.
5. Core animation: Not sure what the Vista comparison is here. The demo reminded me of Microsoft Max photo-sharing application. The WWDC developers attending the Jobs keynote didn’t seem wowed with this functionality.
6. Boot Camp. You can run Vista on your Mac. Apple showed Vista running Solitaire in its WWDC demo. But I bet those downloading the 2.5 million copies of Boot Camp available since last year are running a lot of other Windows business apps and games.
7. Spaces: A feature allowing users to group applications into separate spaces. I haven’t seen anything like in in Vista, but the audience didn’t seem overly impressed by it.
8. Dashboard with widgets. Isn’t this like the Vista Sidebar with gadgets?
9. iChat gets a bunch of fun add-ons (photo-booth effects, backrops, etc.) to make it a more fully-featured videoconferencing product. The “iChat Theater” capability Jobs showed off reminded me of Vista’s Meeting Space and/or the new Microsoft “Shared View” (code-named “Tahiti”) document-sharing/conferencing subsystems.
10. Time Machine automatic backup. Vista has built-in automatic backup (Volume Shadow Copy). It doesn’t look anywhere near as cool as Time Machine. But it seems to provide a lot of the same functionality.
Granted, I am not an Apple user. So I’m sure I’m glossing over some subtleties regarding what’s new and cool in Leopard. But given how often I hear the “Redmond, Start Your Photocopiers” message, I was thinking that Leopard would be light years ahead of Vista.

So, Apple folks: What am I missing? I’m not trying to pull a Dvorak here and use this blog post for click bait. Why is Leopard so superior to Vista — other than the non-trivial fact that there will be just one version of Leopard that will be priced at $129 (as opposed to six-plus versions of Vista at a variety of price points well in excess of that amount)?

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

The point is what your missing--thats what punctures.---....and it will....who has the point?....not who you think!!!

Anonymous said...

If that were a lucid and easier to understand comment one might actually leave something in response.
????

Anonymous said...

The original poster brought up the 'point'. Not likely what is referred to but I think these two web pages offer an interesting parrallel in the 'point'.
even the colors are near identical.
Just a fun coincidence I guess.

http://www.vcsy.com/

and(watch the 'magic' and click on the finger pointing.)

http://www.microsoft.com/surface/

WS.

Anonymous said...

Oh. OK Sorry. Certain words have certain connotations and there's no way to pass inference around in text. I understand... I think.

Anonymous said...

No worries. I just find this image too strangely familiar---and then there is .net front and center in the project.---and somewhere is mentioned a layer of code specific to the project which sits on top of the OS. just gathering possible dollar pockets

http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2007/05/30/microsoft-surface-and-wpf.aspx