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- <TD WIDTH=100 VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT><A HREF=""><IMG SRC="../graphics/arthur.gif" WIDTH=57 HEIGHT=75 BORDER=0 ALT=""></A></TD>
- <TD WIDTH=460 VALIGN=TOP><FONT SIZE=7><B>Netscape Requiem</B></FONT></TD>
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- <TD WIDTH=460 ><B><FONT COLOR="#EE3300">John Barnes ventures a timid opinion as to whether online everything and
- dumb terminals are necessarily a fantastic idea</B></FONT><BR>
- In much the same way that HAL, the menacing computer in the film 2001, was supposed to be a superior
- computer to any IBM, because it's letters were all one better than the then world's greatest computer
- manufacturer IBM, must have been at the back of Larry Ellison mind when coming up with the naff
- acronym nc (network computer). Whether or not he thought it was two better is either pure madness
- or complete arrogance, but either way it's more than a mild coincidence.<p>
- In my opinion it's at least two or three times worse than the PC and certainly ten times more
- menacing than HAL. In fact it may well make HAL look like a complete Dick Van Dyke of a computer,
- all smiles and no real substance, whilst it will become an utter child catcher of a machine, friendly
- at first and but a real enemy within; to draw out a poorly thought out and painful Disney
- analogy.<p>
- Why? Because it will make all of us slaves to the telecoms companies who regularly take tea and
- Mr Kipling cakes with the devil. Just when you were thinking that the internet, for all it's faults
- and pretentious hippy evangelists was starting to liberate networks in datacoms version of the love
- and peace movement, the nc comes a long and bursts the happy bubble.<p>
-
- True to form the press are all full of how wonderful it all is and no-one seems to have stopped and
- asked some fundamental questions such as 'why replace a throbbing turbo charged machine for an under
- powered pile of crap that relies on the telecoms network for all its intelligence?'
- Or Why pay $500 for a box of nothing when you've got a perfectly good networked computer already?
- But after all the press thought Frank Bough only took his coke in liquid form until he discovered
- the real thing! <p>
-
- For corporates the questions are even more pointed as many of you will have spent the best part of
- the last ten years replacing all those costly and unreliable dumb terminals with powerful networked
- PCs only to find that it didn't quite fit in with Mr E's vision of the future. Obviously what you
- are going to do now is through is all away, put NC's on the desktop and try, unsuccessfully, along
- with all the other suckers to buy shares in BT, Mercury, AT&T and all the other telecoms companies
- that make money.<p>
-
- Maybe I'm talking out of turn as the concept is great. A super cheap computer that chucks out all the
- over blown operating systems we have all bemoaned for the last decade, in place of a micro kernel
- operating system that is truly open and relies on component based programs and applets instead of
- piles of apps stuffing your now redundant hard drive. But where does all the functionality come
- from? The net. And how difficult is it to get onto successful sites like Netscape or Yahoo on a
- Friday afternoon when all the Californians are looking for colostomy bags and silicon implants? <p>
-
- About as easy as finding a Californian without a colostomy bag or a silicon implant - that's how easy.
- So will the machine really cost $500? I'd say that the running costs alone will make the old
- chubby, bloated, passĪ PC look like a free gift, and the connectivity costs and on-line time will
- start to resemble the spreadsheet from hell as you buckle under the weight of demand after demand.<p>
-
- Clearly the big vendors see the PC as a technology to pass down the line as production and
- distribution costs get bigger and margins get smaller, and the nc must look like a gift horse for
- them. on top of this they all know that communications is the market to conquer and grow the empires
- of the next century around. Sadly for you, they'll do it worth your help unless you think carefully.
- Which would definitely put a different twist on the familiar 'serf the net'.</td>
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