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- Path: news.micron.net!news
- From: Mustang@vrb.com (Aaron Smith)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Subject: Infoworld Amiga mentions.
- Date: Mon, 22 Jan 96 08:10:45
- Organization: Virtual Reality BBS
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <19960122.856C950.7BB8@vrb.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: vrb.com
-
-
- I grabbed a few more articles I have collected from magazines lately
- that mention the Amiga. Here are some I got from infoworld. I will post each
- one as a reply beyond this one.
-
-
- Notes from the Field Some independence! If you don't upgrade with Microsoft,
- you get burned
-
- BY ROBERT X. CRINGELY
-
-
- Publication Date: July 10, 1995 (Vol. 17, Issue 28)
-
- Independence day -- when we Americans exercise our inalienable right to cook
- huge slabs of greasy meat over outdoor fires and to drink too much beer. Sure,
- there's also a bit of history attached to the July 4th celebration, but I
- maintain the burned meat ritual was established long before 1776.
-
- Pammy and I played our roles in this tableau. I donned the manly cooking
- apron; she doled out beers to our motley collection of hackers, neurotic boys,
- leather fetishists, and alcoholic newspaperfolk.
-
- Rent to own
-
- But the meat's at the center. Even Pammy, who hasn't eaten flesh since she was
- untattooed, responded to the primal smell of barbeque smoke. Mastadon, anyone?
-
- I think Microsoft, too, is about to present us with something really tempting
- -- $50 upgrades to the Win95 versions of its productivity apps. Expect buying
- these apps from scratch to get cheaper, too, with prices around $110. At least
- that's what the FoxPro guys have been saying in early demos.
-
- It's all part of a grand plan to separate us more reliably from our money:
- Win95 begets Word 95, Excel 95, Access 95, and so on. Microsoft fully intends
- there to be '96, '97, and '98 versions of all these apps as well as the
- underlying OS. Sometimes the annual changes will be big, sometimes they'll be
- small, but we'll upgrade every year because it will only cost $50. If we skip
- an upgrade, then we have to start over for $110, which makes a real incentive
- to just keep upgrading and upgrading.
-
- In other words, Microsoft is freeing itself from big (and inevitably late)
- product revisions in favor of a more deterministic schedule. Any new features
- actually finished by a certain date become a part of that years' edition. What
- it does to you and me is turn us from purchasers into leasers of software. But
- what does it do to dealers, since most of these upgrades will be direct?
-
- Microsoft privately expects to sell 70 million upgrades in the six months
- after Windows 95 ships. That's $3.5 billion in sales.
-
- I laid out this theory a couple weeks ago at the PC Data "everything you ever
- wanted to know about software sales statistics while attempting to remain
- awake" conference and Microsoft representatives in the audience said I was
- "pretty close" to describing their strategy.
-
- Life, liberty, and the pursuit of illegal access
-
- Of course I talk too much to be an effective outdoor cook. Things are always a
- little overdone. I may have overdone it a bit last week, too, when I described
- the Linux NTFS client. This software does make it possible for somebody to
- boot your PC from a floppy and read your NT files, but it won't read those
- files over a network. However, if you still need something to worry about,
- consider the bootable Linux PPP server. Reboot a computer with a modem
- attached inside your company's fire wall and you can get an Internet service
- provider on the house. Alternately, anyone who knows the modem phone number
- can get to data inside the fire wall.
-
- Here's some good news for a change. The new Amiga machines from Escom will be
- on their way soon in two versions using Motorola 68060 processors. The low-end
- 2001 box has a 50-MHz chip, 4MB of RAM, quad-speed CD-ROM, and a SCSI-2
- controller all for around $500 sans monitor. The $1,500 Amiga 5000 has a
- 66-MHz chip with FPU and MMU, 16MB of RAM, 730MB SCSI-2 drive, and a
- quad-speed CD-ROM.
-
- "Great party!" said one of my "friends" who had had a little too much to
- drink. "I always said nobody puts on a party like my old buddy Spencer!"
-
- What did he call me? It doesn't matter as long as you call me with an industry
- secret at (415) 342-0251;
- fax: (415) 342-8950; or bob@cringely.com.
-
-
-
-
- "Amiga, computers for people who want more than just a PC."
-
- Finger mustang@vrb.com info@vrb.com recent@vrb.com who@vrb.com
- A3000 Warped 040/40Mhz 16MB/2gigs, 17 serial ports, OS3.1
- A4000Tower 060 or PPC soon!
-