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- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!torn!nott!cunews!revcan!geovision!pt
- From: pt@geovision.gvc.com (Paul Tomblin)
- Subject: Re: ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE IBM
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.200432.10354@geovision.gvc.com>
- Reply-To: pt@geovision.gvc.com
- Organization: Not officially GeoVision Systems Inc., Ottawa, Ontario
- References: <BxtpIv.AMD@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> <STEVEV.92Nov17104240@miser.uoregon.edu> <1992Nov18.134855.28580@geovision.gvc.com> <1992Nov19.230823.9763@spatula.rent.com>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 20:04:32 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
- azog@spatula.rent.com (Billy D'Augustine) writes:
-
- >In article <1992Nov18.134855.28580@geovision.gvc.com> pt@geovision.gvc.com writes:
- >[ stuff about IBM S/370 ]
- >>From this I infer that you consider it a ``bad thing'' that an IBM mainframe
- >>(or PC) user can upgrade his hardware without buying new versions of commercial
- >>software?
-
- >You can apply the same arguement to the whole world, and where would we
- >be? With 100MHz Intel 80586s, 64mb of RAM, all running MS-DOS 3.3.
-
- You misread me. I don't think progress is a bad thing. I just think that
- there is a time and a place for backward compatibility, and a time and a
- place for progress. If I have something that is on the bleeding edge of
- technology, like a GIS, then by all means I'm gonna want it on the latest,
- hottest Unix box, and I'm going to be buying upgraded software far more
- frequently than hardware.
-
- If, on the other hand, I'm doing something boring, predictable and stable
- like running SAS or accounting software, or filling in blanks on a form, then
- all I want is compute cycles, and I don't want to have to buy the same damn
- package over again when I want some more compute cycles.
-
- I suppose you think I'm some horrible technophobe because I use a vt220
- terminal to dial into work instead of using the latest, hottest PC with the
- latest terminal emulator, or because the computer my kids play with is an XT
- running DOS, rather than a Mips box running Windows NT.
-
- --
- Paul Tomblin, pt@geovision.gvc.com
- (This is not an official opinion of GeoVision Systems Inc.)
- I've always wanted to know what's around the next bend
- - Herman Smith (Jackrabbit) Johansen. 1875-1983
-