Showing headlines posted by phsolide

Malware authors target Google Chrome

Ultimate Windows Guy Ed Bott, based on a tip from a Silverlight developer, "discovers" that Google can serve up links that deliver social engineering attacks to Chrome-on-Windows users.

Apache webserver mentioned by name in slashdot headline

Apache (and other web servers) have some kind of DOS-able flaw. IIS does not have this flaw. Do "all computers" suffer from the problem? No - only Apache and other open source web servers. An example of the "when MSFT software has a problem, all computers are at risk" FUD, only in reverse.

True believers: The biggest cults in tech

You began to identify with it, even develop a belief system around it. You may have attended regular meetings of others similarly afflicted, and openly despised members of other groups. Before you were even aware of it, you'd joined a cult.

Don't fall for the monoculture myth

Another member of the Windows ecosystem takes a rhetorical stance in favor of a software monoculture, in this case, the Adobe Acrobat PDF reader/viewer.

How Microsoft is trying to eradicate email

  • InfoWorld blog - The Deep End; By Paul Venezia (Posted by phsolide on Mar 19, 2008 1:05 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Very strange article in which an InfoWorld Blogger seems to have taken the red pill and awakened to the truth about bot nets and the email spam they produce.

[Another funny article- Scott]

SJVN opines about Windows patching vs Linux patching

  • eWeek.com; By Steven J Vaughn-Nichols (Posted by phsolide on May 24, 2005 10:15 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
Steven J Vaughn-Nichols calls it as he sees it: the MSFT-backed, Wipro study on patching has to contort its methodology in order to come to the pre-determined conclusion. Also patching a Linux box doesn't necessarily require a reboot, but patching a Windows box almost always does.

Gates grouses about schools

  • C|Net News.com; By John Borland (Posted by phsolide on May 4, 2005 12:43 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
This article has a singularly inappropriate headline, and it merely reveals what hypocrites high-tech execs are. By their own personal actions they make working as an engineer in certain industries economically and personally unrewarding, then they ponder publicly why youths don't enter programs leading to engineering work.

Technology Experts Paid to Plug Products on Programs

  • Wall Street Journal (Posted by phsolide on Apr 19, 2005 5:54 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Ever wonder why the "technology" reviews by experts on local news seem so lame? Or why they tend to give nothing but glowing reviews to sub-moronic products? Perhaps, just perhaps, large companies have paid the "experts" to plug their products. Without disclosing this arrangement.